Hungarian elections: Orban's party accuses opposition of vote-buying

On Sunday, April 12, elections are being held in Hungary, in which the current Prime Minister Viktor Orban, whose support has been announced by US President Donald Trump, will be challenged by opposition leader Peter Magyar.

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According to the BBC, five parties are running in the parliamentary elections, including the left-wing Democratic Coalition, the parody Two-Tailed Dog Party, and the right-wing Our Homeland (Mi Hazánk), but the real rivals are Orban's Fidesz and Magyar's Tisza. In order to enter parliament, political forces must overcome the five percent threshold.

Read also: Russian special services prepared an “assassination” against Orban for the sake of winning the elections – investigation

The vote count must be completed no later than Saturday, April 18.

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Meanwhile, Viktor Orban's party has already announced that its opponents are bribing voters. According to telex.hu, Fidesz claimed to have discovered an audio recording in which opposition members discuss “the distribution of subsidies disguised as donations to needy Roma voters.”

Read the article “Orban has set traps: even in the event of an election defeat, his people can paralyze the new government of Hungary” on our website.

Photo by Pixabay

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