Orbán Viktor: Brüsszel a Tisza-adóval fizettetné meg Ukrajna támogatását a magyarokkal

A miniszerelnök szerint a nyár jól alakult kormánypártok számára, de senki nem dőlhet hátra.

This is not your typical campaign before a typical election. On Sunday, Hungarians will vote in the European Parliamentary elections for the third time. But for a number of reasons, the campaign has been unusually low-key.
Why has this campaign been so low-key? Part of the reason, of course, is that it follows just weeks after the national parliamentary elections, which is far more important to Hungarians. We cannot say, though, that the campaign before the national elections was particularly heated. Many months before the election in April, everything pointed to another big victory for Fidesz. The united left was not able to come close. Today, the left-liberal opposition parties are in a battle for second place with the radical, right-wing Jobbik. In fact, the left's support base seems to have receded even further, into a tight corner comprising voters in the bigger cities and communist-era housing projects, while Jobbik is gaining in the vast - and poorer - regions of eastern and southern Hungary.
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