
The mood of the Hungarian economy and the confidence index have reached a two-year high — a result that even the left-wing media is forced to acknowledge.
This is thanks to the national government, which does not abandon Hungarian families, the elderly, or businesses even when Europe’s economy is weakening and the leaders in Brussels are preparing for war.
Here are just a few examples of what we can thank the government for:
home-creation subsidies, tax benefits, the armed forces bonus, and the 13th and 14th month pensions — these are not benefits that come automatically.
While the Tisza party puts Brussels’ and Ukraine’s interests first, we stand with the Hungarian people, even in a difficult global political situation.
That is why Fidesz is the safe choice on April 12.
Hold on, because I have news that even the left-wing press cannot ignore. The mood of the Hungarian economy has reached a two-year high. Yes, even they are forced to admit it. But why is it rising?
Because Hungarians can clearly see that despite the difficult international environment, we have a government that does not leave families and the elderly on their own.
Let’s look at the facts: tax benefits, home-creation subsidies, the armed forces bonus, the 13th and 14th month pensions — and we could go on.
While Tisza represents Brussels’ and Ukraine’s interests, we always stand with the Hungarian people. We have a government that puts the prosperity of Hungarians first, even in the most difficult global political circumstances.
And the confidence index shows that you also value stability and predictability.
Let’s continue on this path. Only Fidesz is the safe choice.
1️⃣ Selective statistics
Excerpt
“Hungarian economic sentiment and the confidence index are at a two-year high.”
Technique
The message highlights a single positive indicator from the economy.
For example, it does not mention:
- inflation
- real wage developments
- the budget deficit
- economic growth
Goal
To create a positive image of the economy based on a single data point.
Effect
The reader may feel that:
➡️ the economy is performing well overall.
2️⃣ Building an external enemy narrative (external enemy framing)
Excerpt
“Brussels leaders are preparing for war.”
Technique
The political debate is framed as an external threat.
The word “Brussels” functions here as a political symbol, not as a specific institution.
Goal
- to present the government’s position as defensive
- to frame the conflict as an issue of national sovereignty
Effect
The voter may feel that:
➡️ Hungary is being threatened by external forces.
3️⃣ Delegitimizing the internal opponent (internal enemy framing)
Excerpt
“Tisza puts Brussels and Ukrainian interests first.”
Technique
The political opponent is portrayed as representing foreign interests.
Goal
- to frame the political conflict as patriotic vs. foreign interests
- to delegitimize the opponent
Effect
The reader may feel that:
➡️ the opposition does not represent Hungarian interests.
4️⃣ Listing benefits (benefit listing)
Excerpt
“Tax benefits, home-creation subsidies, weapon bonuses, 13th and 14th month pensions.”
Technique
A list of social and financial benefits is presented.
Goal
- to recall concrete advantages
- to connect government policies with positive emotions
Effect
The voter may feel that:
➡️ the government directly supports ordinary people.
5️⃣ Message repetition
The same ideas appear several times in the text:
- “does not leave families alone”
- “we stand with the Hungarian people”
- “security and stability”
Technique
Repeating the same message multiple times.
Goal
To reinforce the message in the audience’s mind.
6️⃣ “Us vs. them” narrative (polarization framing)
The text divides politics into two blocks.
Us
- Hungarians
- the national government
- stability
Them
- Brussels
- Ukraine
- Tisza
Goal
To divide the political landscape into two opposing camps.
7️⃣ Electoral mobilization (mobilization framing)
Excerpt
“That is why Fidesz is the safe choice on April 12.”
Technique
The entire message ultimately pushes the reader toward a specific voting decision.
Goal
- to gain political support
- to mobilize voters.
Summary
The text is a classic campaign communication message that combines several techniques:
- highlighting a positive economic indicator
- building external and internal enemy narratives
- emphasizing social benefits
- repetition and emotional messaging
- electoral mobilization
The goal is not to present the full economic situation, but to construct a simple political narrative:
➡️ stable government
➡️ external threats
➡️ opposition danger
➡️ therefore the “safe choice.”