Szentkirályi Alexandra and the Politics of False Connections


Szentkirályi Alexandra claims that removing a Fidesz-proposed “migration threat” debate from the agenda of the Budapest City Assembly proves that Mayor Gergely Karácsony is “protecting the TISZA party” and helping them “hide” the fact that the EU migration pact was voted on in Brussels.

This claim collapses under basic scrutiny.

The Budapest City Assembly has no legal authority over EU migration policy, EU treaties, or votes held in Brussels. It cannot approve, block, or conceal an EU migration pact. Removing a topic from the city assembly’s agenda is an administrative and jurisdictional decision, not an act of “defending migrants” or shielding any political party.

Linking a local procedural decision to an EU-level legislative process is a deliberate distortion. The EU migration pact was debated and voted on within EU institutions — involving national governments and the European Parliament — not city councils.

By framing a routine agenda decision as proof of conspiracy, Szentkirályi Alexandra is not describing reality, but manufacturing fear through false cause-and-effect. This is a textbook example of propaganda: mixing unrelated political levels, assigning hidden motives without evidence, and presenting speculation as fact.

Budapest’s city government cannot “hide” EU votes.
It cannot “protect” or “expose” EU migration policy.
And removing a debate proposal does not change what happened in Brussels.

This is not governance.
It is narrative construction.