alexa

🟠 Let’s meet on March 15 at the largest Peace March ever! It will be the biggest if everyone brings as many people as possible – and I will do the same.

In such a tense geopolitical situation as the current one, we must stand together to defend Hungary’s peace. When Zelensky allegedly issues life-threatening threats against the Hungarian prime minister, when Ukrainians are said to be blackmailing us by refusing to reopen the Druzhba pipeline, and when they are accused of cooperating with the Tisza Party to bring a pro-Ukrainian government to power in Hungary, we cannot remain silent.

👥 Everyone who wants Hungary to remain a free and sovereign country should be at the Peace March — with a national government that represents Hungarian interests.

Let us be as many as possible and show that Fidesz is the only reliable choice!

How many people will you bring with you to the Peace March?

A lot. And I ask everyone to bring as many people as they can — not just one, but as many as possible. We want this to be the biggest Peace March ever.

And the name itself is great, isn’t it? That we stand together for peace — something that is urgently needed in the current situation.

We see that Ukrainians do not hesitate to issue life-threatening threats against the Hungarian prime minister. They shut down the oil pipeline and support Péter Magyar because they want a pro-Ukrainian government in Hungary.

But those who stand on the side of freedom, those who want Hungary to have a sovereign government that protects Hungarian interests — their place is at the Peace March.

This weekend, let’s gather in as great numbers as possible at the Peace March.

1️⃣ Mass Mobilization Narrative (mass mobilization framing)

Excerpt

“Let’s meet on March 15 at the largest Peace March ever!”

Technique

The text frames a political event as a historically significant moment:

  • “the largest ever”
  • “everyone should bring as many people as possible”

This is a classic mass-mobilization rhetorical strategy.

Goal

  • attract as many participants as possible
  • demonstrate political strength
  • activate supporters

Effect

The reader may feel:

➡️ “a historic moment is happening”
➡️ “I should be there too.”


2️⃣ Fear-based geopolitical narrative (threat framing)

Excerpt

“a tense geopolitical situation”
“Zelensky has issued a death threat against the Hungarian prime minister”

Technique

The text portrays the political conflict as a security threat.

Key elements:

  • war-like atmosphere
  • reference to personal danger
  • presence of an external enemy

Goal

  • trigger an emotional reaction
  • frame the political issue as a national security matter

Effect

The reader may feel:

➡️ Hungary is in danger
➡️ therefore strong leadership is needed.


3️⃣ Construction of an external enemy (external enemy construction)

Excerpt

“the Ukrainians are blackmailing us”
“they refuse to reopen the Druzhba pipeline”

Technique

A foreign country is portrayed as a hostile actor.

According to the narrative, Ukraine:

  • threatens
  • blackmails
  • interferes in Hungarian politics.

Goal

➡️ create national unity
➡️ present the conflict as originating from external pressure.

Effect

The reader may feel:

➡️ Hungary is under external pressure.


4️⃣ Creation of an internal enemy (internal enemy framing)

Excerpt

“they are collaborating with the Tisza Party”

Technique

The political opponent is portrayed as serving foreign interests.

This follows a classic propaganda structure:

external enemy + internal traitor.

Goal

  • delegitimize the political opponent
  • turn political competition into a moral conflict

Effect

The reader may feel:

➡️ the opposition does not represent national interests.


5️⃣ False dilemma (false dichotomy)

Excerpt

“only Fidesz is the safe choice”

Technique

The political choice is reduced to two options:

  • Fidesz = security and sovereignty
  • others = danger

Goal

➡️ create a simplified decision framework.

Effect

For the reader, the political choice becomes:

➡️ “either with us or against us.”


6️⃣ Mobilizing national identity (patriotic framing)

Excerpt

“so that Hungary remains a free and sovereign country”

Technique

Political support is framed as a patriotic duty.

Key concepts:

  • freedom
  • sovereignty
  • national government

Goal

➡️ trigger emotional identification.

Effect

The reader may feel:

➡️ participating in the event is a patriotic act.


7️⃣ Repetition and crowd psychology (repetition & bandwagon)

Excerpt

“let’s be as many as possible”
“everyone should bring as many people as possible”

Technique

The text repeatedly emphasizes the importance of large numbers.

This is the classic bandwagon effect:

“everyone will be there.”

Goal

➡️ create social pressure.

Effect

The reader may feel:

➡️ if they do not attend, they will miss out.


Brief overall picture

The text represents a classic political mobilization narrative.

Its main structure:

1️⃣ external threat (Ukraine)
2️⃣ internal enemy (the opposition)
3️⃣ national defense (Fidesz)
4️⃣ mass mobilization (Peace March)

This framework relies primarily on emotional and identity-based political mobilization.