"We didn't want that any of our signatures to come from an unauthenticated source," the satirical party said.Continue reading
The opposition alliance pressed charges after several irregularities were found with the endorsement signatures of three of the smaller parties in the 5th electoral district. Porn tycoon György Gattyán’s Solution Movement (MeMo), Tibor Szanyi’s radical leftist ISZOMM (DRINKK), and György Gődény’s Party of Normal Life (NÉP) all had suspicious signatures according to the opposition’s analysis. They suspect ruling Fidesz to have cheated with the signature collection.
The 5th constituency of Budapest, consisting of the 6th and 7th districts, has long been considered an opposition stronghold where Lajos Oláh (DK) won in the previous two elections. Now, he is set to clash with Fidesz’s Balázs Norbert Kovács, besides Two Tailed Dog Party’s (MKKP) Roland Terdik, Mi Hazánk’s Gyula Popely, and MeMo’s Gergely Major.
After Oláh’s team checked the signatures of the other parties, they found several irregularities.
In regard to NÉP and MeMo, a police investigation is underway. In MeMo’s case, police initiated the seizure of their signature collection sheets on suspicion of fraud.
According to Oláh’s depiction of the case, Fidesz was cheating together with the fake parties, but they were eventually caught.
In reaction, MeMo said they are not aware of their candidate having submitted false signatures.
György Gődény’s party, on the other hand, said that as long as they are not entitled to check the ID cards, signatures of those signing cannot be checked.
Fidesz said they complied with all the relevant laws and one person may support multiple parties.
Previously, the satirical, government-critical Two Tailed Dog Party (MKKP) returned a hefty amount of state support after roughly 400 signatures came from suspicious sources in one of the constituencies, resulting in the withdrawal of their candidate there. The party, famed for its fight against corruption, said they didn’t want to succeed with controversial methods. This just adds to other controversies the small party encountered when collecting signatures.
Fidesz’s controversial involvement in helping smaller parties with collecting signatures is not something of a trumped-up charge. Certain Fidesz opinion leaders (such as controversial columnist Zsolt Bayer) explicitly urged their voters to sign for smaller parties, including MKKP, in order to potentially divide votes to be given for the opposition alliance, thus weakening the opposition alliance’s chances.
featured image: one of NÉP’s signature collecing stands; via Göde Imre NÉP- Facebook