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🚨 From the leaked economic plan of the Tisza Party we know that they would make healthcare paid and reduce the number of hospital beds — something Zoltán Tarr has also spoken about.

The national government, however, believes that healthcare should not be dismantled but further developed. We are using both domestic and European Union funds for this purpose, and this will continue in the future as well. For us, what is good for Hungarians is what matters — both in healthcare and in Hungary’s future.

🟠 That is why Fidesz is the reliable choice.

According to the Tisza Party’s program — their leaked program — they would reintroduce a paid component into healthcare and place greater emphasis on it, while also reducing the number of hospital beds, as Zoltán Tarr has stated.

We believe this is not the right direction. We believe the Hungarian healthcare system must continue to be developed. It is such a large system that the work will never truly be finished — there will always be improvements to make. What we want is to move forward step by step in developing it.

For this, we use both domestic resources and European Union funds, and this will continue to be the case in the future as well.

Propaganda and Influence Techniques in the Text

1️⃣ “Leaked plan” narrative (leaked plan framing)

Excerpt

“From the leaked economic plan of the Tisza Party we know that…”

Technique

The communication refers to an allegedly leaked document.

Key elements

  • “leaked plan”
  • “we know that”

This is a common political rhetorical tool used to:

➡️ create the appearance of evidence
➡️ legitimize a claim without a verifiable source

The word “leaked” creates the impression of secret insider information, which increases perceived credibility even if the content itself is not verified.

Goal

  • to present the claim as a fact
  • to frame the opponent’s intentions negatively

Effect

Readers may think:

“If it was leaked, it must be true.”


2️⃣ Fear framing through the loss of healthcare

Excerpt

“they would make healthcare paid”
“they would reduce the number of hospital beds”

Technique

The communication exploits one of the strongest social fears:

➡️ loss of healthcare access
➡️ deterioration of medical services

This is a typical campaign tool because:

  • it affects every voter
  • it is particularly sensitive for older voters.

Goal

  • create a sense of existential threat
  • mobilize voters emotionally.

Effect

Readers may think:

“If they come to power, we will have to pay for hospitals.”


3️⃣ Enemy vs. protector framing (protector narrative)

Excerpt

“The national government believes that healthcare should not be dismantled but further developed.”

Technique

The communication constructs two opposing poles:

EnemyProtector
Tisza PartyGovernment
dismantlingdevelopment
paid healthcareimproved healthcare

This is one of the most classic propaganda frameworks.

Goal

Present the election as a good vs. bad choice.

Effect

Readers may perceive:

“They destroy – we build.”


4️⃣ Appeal to authority

Excerpt

“Tarr Zoltán also spoke about this.”

Technique

The message refers to a person as supporting evidence.

However:

  • no quotation is provided
  • no context is given
  • no exact source is cited.

This represents the logical fallacy of appeal to authority.

Goal

Increase the perceived credibility of the claim.

Effect

Readers may think:

“If someone said it publicly, it must be true.”


5️⃣ Repetition framing

The text repeats the same claims multiple times:

  • “leaked program”
  • “paid healthcare”
  • “reducing hospital beds”

Technique

Repetition is one of the strongest propaganda tools.

In communication psychology this is known as the:

illusory truth effect

➡️ the more often people hear something
➡️ the more likely they are to believe it.

Goal

Embed the claim deeply in voters’ minds.


6️⃣ National interest framing

Excerpt

“What is good for us is what is good for Hungarians.”

Technique

The communication equates the government’s political position with the national interest itself.

This is a very common rhetorical strategy in politics.

Goal

  • create moral superiority
  • implicitly delegitimize the opponent

Effect

Readers may perceive:

“Anyone opposing them is opposing the interests of Hungarians.”


7️⃣ Binary election framing

Excerpt

“That is why Fidesz is the safe choice.”

Technique

The communication simplifies the political decision.

The framework becomes:

Bad choiceGood choice
TiszaFidesz

This is known as binary framing.

Goal

Reduce political complexity and eliminate nuance in voter decision-making.


8️⃣ Development promise narrative

Excerpt

“31 billion forints”
“50 institutions will be renewed”

Technique

The communication uses specific numbers and investments.

Numbers create the impression of precision and credibility, even when the broader context is missing.

Goal

Emphasize government performance and investment.


The Overall Communication Narrative

The text constructs a classic campaign structure:

Narrative structure

1️⃣ Enemy
➡️ “paid healthcare”

2️⃣ Threat
➡️ “reduction of hospital beds”

3️⃣ Protector
➡️ “the national government”

4️⃣ Solution
➡️ “Fidesz is the safe choice”

This is a typical campaign propaganda framework.


Summary

The text uses at least seven classic propaganda techniques:

  • leaked plan narrative
  • fear framing around healthcare
  • enemy vs. protector framing
  • appeal to authority
  • repetition framing
  • national interest framing
  • binary election framing