Tag: Viktor Orbán
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3,627 words / 21:30
Russian translation here
To listen in a player, click here. To download the mp3, right-click here and choose “save link as” or “save target as.” To subscribe to the CC podcast RSS feed, click here.
Over the past three years, Hungary has become well-known throughout the world for its resistance to illegal immigration as well as to the demands of the European Union, which has been attempting to force all of its Member States to accept quotas of migrants in spite of the fact that the majority of people in many of those nations are opposed to it. (more…)
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The following report was published on June 20 at the Hungary Report Website.
Parliament on Wednesday passed the “Stop Soros” package of laws that penalize activities in support of illegal migration. Lawmakers also passed the constitutional amendment on “the preservation of Hungary’s Christian culture.” (more…)
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1,070 words
The following report was published on May 24 at the Hungary Report Website. A video of Bannon’s talk in Budapest is here. (more…)
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679 words
The Visegrád Group, or V4, is a Central European political union representing the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, and Slovakia. It has been attracting a great deal of attention in recent years due to its member states’ resistance to the migration policies of the European Union. (more…)
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It’s Official:
“Repressed” in Hungary, the Soros Foundation Announces that it is Leaving the CountryThe Open Society Foundations, financed by the billionaire George Soros, who funds many NGOs, officially announced today that it is leaving Hungary, where it has been active since 1984. It will move its operations to Berlin in response to the “repressive” policies of the government of recently reelected Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who is now beginning his third consecutive term. (more…)
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453 words
According to the leading Austrian newspaper Die Presse, Patrick Gaspard, President of the Open Society Foundations (OSF), which was created and is led by George Soros, said the OSF would leave Budapest to move to Berlin. (UPDATE: The OSF announced on Friday that it is not going to make a decision about leaving Hungary until after the government passes its new law about taxing NGOs that favor migration.) (more…)
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1,119 slov
English original here
Navzdory předpovědím o opozici povzbuzené vysokou volební účastí, jíž se v nedělních volbách mělo podařit snížit parlamentní převahu strany Fidesz Viktora Orbána, se po sečtení více než 98% hlasů zatím výsledky příliš neliší od minulých voleb v roce 2014. (more…)
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5,038 words
Audio version: To listen in a player, use the one above or click here. To download the mp3, right-click here and choose “save link as” or “save target as.” To subscribe to the CC podcast RSS feed, click here.Hungary in 2018 lies under a pall of darkness. Its citizens, kept in thrall by being fed a steady diet of fear of imaginary threats, unbridled racism, and cynical hatemongering through the government’s relentless propaganda, are cowed and starving, but dare not speak out, as the government brutally cracks down on the slightest dissent. (more…)
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56 words / 25:30
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s address to the nation on March 15 of this year, with English subtitles. March 15 is a national holiday commemorating Hungary’s revolt against the Hapsburgs in the 1848 Revolution. Orbán voices his opposition to Brussels and the other forces which he sees as instigating Europe’s ongoing migrant crisis ahead of Sunday’s national elections.
Viktor Orban’s March 15th Speech -
64 words / 1:18
Our friends at the Visegrád Post, which offers news about Central Europe from a Rightist perspective, have added English subtitles to a video that was released over the weekend by Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán on his official Facebook page, showing how to cook an Easter ham. This video is especially timely prior to the Hungarian national elections, which will be held on Sunday.
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101 words / 14:54
An interview by the French Rightist TV Libertés with Zoltán Kovács, the official spokesman for the Hungarian government, regarding the October 2016 referendum on the European Union’s attempt to force Hungary to accept a share of the migrants that have been flooding into Europe since the crisis began. Hungary’s next national election will be held in less than a month, and the issue of the EU migrant quotas has been the primary focus of the case being made by the ruling Fidesz party of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán for why they should be returned to power. The interview is conducted in English.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AyZN90IB7-M