
The sober majority knows exactly what is at stake: we want to stay out of the war, and we do not want to send Hungarians’ money to Ukraine! 👍
There is a Fidesz stand in Újpalota. A Tisza stand. This is what it looks like. No one can say it was just a moment taken out of context. We are now half an hour later. At the Tisza stand, there is currently a lady there. Let me show you the Fidesz stand. Balázs Barkóczi is the real strong candidate on the Brussels side here. He has to be defeated, and we will defeat him and build momentum in North Pest.
1️⃣ The “sensible majority” narrative
(bandwagon framing / majority framing)
Excerpt
“The sensible majority knows exactly what is at stake.”
Technique
The communication suggests that
➡️ “normal” people have already decided what the correct position is.
Keyword
“sensible majority”
Goal
- to pressure undecided voters
- to create the impression that the majority is already on this side
Effect
Readers may feel that:
- “most people think this way”
- “I don’t want to be in the minority”
2️⃣ Dramatizing existential stakes
(high-stakes framing / fear framing)
Excerpt
“we want to stay out of the war”
Technique
The election is framed not as a normal political competition but as
➡️ a question of war or peace.
Goal
- to trigger an emotional reaction
- to dramatize the importance of the election
Effect
Readers may feel:
- “if we choose wrong, there will be war”
3️⃣ External enemy narrative
(external enemy framing)
Excerpt
“we don’t want Hungarian money sent to Ukraine”
Technique
The communication sets up a contrast between a foreign actor and Hungarian interests.
Narrative
Hungarian interests
vs
Ukrainian interests
Goal
- to trigger emotional identification
- to simplify the political conflict
4️⃣ Presenting visual “evidence”
(visual framing / anecdotal evidence)
Excerpt
“No one can say this was just a moment taken out of context. We are half an hour later.”
Technique
The communication presents a specific situation as general evidence.
Rhetorically this is:
➡️ anecdotal proof
Goal
- to suggest that one side is more popular
- to provide visual confirmation
Effect
People tend to treat a single observed scene as proof of a broader trend.
5️⃣ Delegitimizing the opponent
(political labeling / enemy framing)
Excerpt
“Barkoci Balázs is the real strong candidate on the Brussels side.”
Technique
The opponent is associated with an external power.
Keyword
“Brussels side”
Goal
- to portray the opponent as acting against national interests
- to simplify the political choice
6️⃣ Preparing a victory narrative
(inevitability framing)
Excerpt
“He must be defeated, and we will defeat him.”
Technique
The communication speaks about a certain future victory already in the present.
Goal
- to energize supporters
- to create the image of a winning side
Effect
People are often inclined to join what appears to be the winning side.
Summary
The text represents classic campaign communication, built mainly on:
- a majority narrative (“the sensible majority”)
- war-related fear framing
- an external enemy (Ukraine / Brussels)
- visual anecdotal evidence
- delegitimization of the opponent
- a victory narrative
This type of communication relies primarily on emotional and identity-based mobilization, rather than on detailed policy programs or concrete policy arguments.