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Deputy Leader of Mi Hazánk: Party Doesn’t Want to Be ‘Visceral Opposition’

MTI-Hungary Today 2022.04.06.

The radical Mi Hazánk (Our Homeland) party will support proposals in parliament that serve the interests of the Hungarian people, and does not want to be a “visceral opposition”, Dóra Dúró, the party’s deputy leader, said on Wednesday.

Speaking to public news channel M1, Dúró said Mi Hazánk saw its crossing of the 5 percent threshold for seats in parliament in the election as “a triumph of the heart, faith, work and being principled”.

Dúró said Mi Hazánk’s campaign had been at a disadvantage and the party had been hindered in getting its message out. She said the party’s base was partly made up of former Jobbik voters, adding, at the same time, that the party had provided “new answers to a number of 21st-century issues”.

Far-right Mi Hazánk Vows to Be 'Fierce Opposition'
Far-right Mi Hazánk Vows to Be 'Fierce Opposition'

Toroczkai said working to the benefit of Hungary was Mi Hazánk's priority, he said, adding that it could support government or opposition proposals if they were good for the country.Continue reading

She said that when it came to the pandemic, ruling Fidesz and the opposition left-liberal parties “pursued the same policy of lockdowns and forcing vaccines onto people”. She said Mi Hazánk had been the only party to speak out against the stationing of NATO troops in Hungary and was the only one to oppose granting European Union membership to Ukraine unconditionally.

Asked about Mi Hazánk’s role as an opposition party, Dúró said they would only consider the interests of the country. “We don’t want to be a hysterical and visceral opposition,” she said. Mi Hazánk will examine every proposal based on its contents and will support them if they benefit the Hungarian people, she added.

Dúró said one urgent task was to thwart a World Health Organization agreement she said could enforce coronavirus vaccine mandates without the consent of national governments. The party also views agriculture as a strategic sector and favours basing the country’s food security on locally grown and produced foods, she said.

Commenting on the united opposition’s and specifically Jobbik’s performance in Sunday’s election, Dúró said “people can’t be viewed as mathematical formulas.” Politics is fundamentally about values and strategic issues cannot be bypassed, she argued. Dúró said Mi Hazánk had been capable of offering such a vision to people, which she said had contributed significantly to the party crossing the parliamentary threshold. The left-wing opposition, on the other hand, made the election a referendum on Prime Minister Viktor Orbán “and failed to offer any sort of vision”, Dúró said.

Featured photo by Tamás Kovács/MTI


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