
17 days until victory. 🇭🇺✌️ The majority of Hungarians do not want a pro-Ukrainian puppet government, and they do not want a prime minister who parties wildly at drug-fueled bashes. That is why the outcome will be a big Fidesz victory. 👍
So now I’m going to brag a little, all right? And also give strength to everyone who supports the national side and wants Hungary to remain a Hungarian country, rather than being taken over by a pro-Ukrainian puppet government and drugged-up guys like that. Wherever I go these days in the streets, in Budapest — I haven’t been in the countryside in the past week, but not just in North Pest, anywhere in the city — everywhere there are supporters, handshakes, winks, support, honking horns, waving from cars. It feels really good, thank you very much, and I’m passing that energy on to everyone: we are the majority. And common sense will prevail on April 12. There will be a huge celebration, a great victory, and all of Hungary will benefit from it.
👉 Main narrative:
- “We = the national side, the majority, the good ones”
- “They = pro-Ukrainian puppets + drug users, incompetent”
- “Victory = inevitable”
👉 Underlying formula:
identity + enemy image + illusion of majority + emotional mobilization → political mobilization
🔍 Persuasion techniques (detailed)
1️⃣ Enemy construction + stigmatization
👉 “pro-Ukrainian puppet government”
👉 “drugged-up guys”
Technique:
➡️ labeling + character assassination
Goal:
👉 morally discredit the opponent without debate
Effect:
👉 you don’t compare policies → you decide based on “good vs bad”
👉 anger, contempt
➡️ Classic propaganda: it doesn’t refute → it stigmatizes
2️⃣ Appropriation of national identity
👉 “Hungary should remain a Hungarian country”
Technique:
➡️ patriotic framing
Goal:
👉 those with us = patriots
👉 those against = “against the nation”
Effect:
👉 false moral pressure
👉 political debate → identity conflict
3️⃣ Illusion of majority (bandwagon)
👉 “supporters everywhere”
👉 “we are the majority”
Technique:
➡️ bandwagon effect
Goal:
👉 make it feel like this is the dominant position
👉 “it’s worth joining the winning side”
Effect:
👉 undecided voters may shift
👉 conformity
➡️ Important: this is not measurement, but amplified personal perception
4️⃣ Personal experience → general truth
👉 “wherever I go… supporters everywhere”
Technique:
➡️ anecdotal evidence
Goal:
👉 personal experience = “national reality”
Effect:
👉 feels authentic, but distorted
👉 not representative → still persuasive
5️⃣ Emotional escalation + collective energy
👉 “handshakes, honking, waving”
👉 “it feels really great”
Technique:
➡️ emotional identification
Goal:
👉 pull the reader into a “shared community experience”
Effect:
👉 “I want to belong to this” feeling
👉 rational thinking pushed into the background
6️⃣ Inevitability of victory narrative
👉 “will be victorious”
👉 “huge victory”
Technique:
➡️ inevitability framing
Goal:
👉 don’t question it → it’s already decided
Effect:
👉 passive acceptance
👉 demotivation of the opponent
7️⃣ Promise of a positive future (without evidence)
👉 “the whole of Hungary will benefit”
Technique:
➡️ vague promise
Goal:
👉 positive emotional closure
Effect:
👉 you don’t ask: how, why?
👉 only a “good feeling” remains
⚠️ Why this text is powerful
👉 It contains no concrete facts or policy
👉 100% emotional + identity-based communication
Combination:
- enemy image
- nation
- majority
- victory
➡️ This is one of the strongest mobilization mixes in political campaigning
🧩 Short summary
This text:
👉 doesn’t argue → it frames
👉 doesn’t prove → it makes you feel
👉 doesn’t inform → it mobilizes
➡️ classic political propaganda, where
the goal is not logical persuasion, but emotional identification and creating a sense of mass support