
🟠 Only 26 days left until a Fidesz victory!
The national government will not allow what belongs to Hungarians to be taken away, and we will stay out of the war!
Kaposvár has united against the war! A massive crowd welcomed Viktor Orbán at the first stop of his nationwide tour as prime minister, where thousands sent a clear message: Hungary wants peace!
Viktor Orbán put it clearly:
“While Europe is marching toward its own downfall, we Hungarians will stand our ground and stay out of the war!”
The national government will never allow what belongs to Hungarians to be taken away! Neither international big capital, nor Brussels, nor Ukraine can strip Hungarian families of their resources!
All of this depends on staying out of the war. This is the most important task for the next four years, and only the national government can guarantee it.
While the Tisza Party has repeatedly proven that it cannot say no to its pro-war allies, cannot say no to Brussels or Kyiv, the national government has shown that it is indeed possible—and necessary—to say no to war, to the exploitation of Hungarians, and to higher energy prices.
No matter how they try to blackmail or threaten us, we will not compromise the safety of Hungarian families: we will stay out of the war, we will not pay Ukraine, and we will not allow a puppet government from Kyiv to be imposed on us!
For them, Ukraine comes first—for us, Hungary comes first!
Fidesz is the safe choice!
I’ve been asking you for so long that it’s getting hard to keep track—now only 26 days remain. What do you think—what will happen in 26 days?
Well, in 26 days we will once again achieve a very serious, decisive Fidesz victory. All signs point to this. I can also see that analysts and pollsters have already started backing away from their earlier claims. They are now preparing narratives to explain why, if Fidesz wins, it happened. They are making all kinds of false statements about it.
But we should also look at, for example, how many people were there yesterday in Kaposvár, at what we could even call the Kaposvár Peace March—thousands of people showed up, all standing for the same thing: we do not want to become a Ukrainian colony, we do not want Ukraine or Brussels to tell us how to live, where to send our money, or whom to admit into the European Union.
It was very good to see so many peace-loving, positive people there in Kaposvár, and earlier at the Peace March as well. There were huge numbers—according to the data, 180,000 people. What is that, if not a reason for hope?
Propaganda Analysis – Alexa’s Text
Core Narrative
The central claim of the text is:
Only Fidesz is capable of protecting Hungary from war, Brussels, Ukraine, “looting,” and an allegedly externally controlled change of government.
This is not a simple political message, but a fully fear-based, binary framing of the election:
- them = war, Ukraine, Brussels, looting, puppet government
- us = peace, security, national self-defense, Hungarian families
This is one of the strongest forms of propaganda, because it does not present a choice between programs, but frames political competition as an existential threat.
1️⃣ “Only 26 days left” – countdown and psychological pressure
Excerpt
“Only 26 days left until Fidesz’s victory!”
Technique
- countdown
- escalation of campaign tension
- creating a sense of inevitability
Goal
- create urgency
- present the event as historically decisive
- mobilize supporters
Effect
- increases emotional intensity
- voters shift from rational evaluation to a “battle is coming” mindset
Real issue
- presents the election outcome as a fact
- frames it not as a democratic contest, but as a predetermined result
2️⃣ “Until Fidesz’s victory” – pre-announced victory
Technique
- bandwagon effect
- aligning with the winner
- majority psychology
Goal
- create the impression that victory is natural and expected
- push undecided voters toward the “winning side”
Effect
- people tend to align with perceived winners
- reduces the appeal of identifying with the opposition
Real issue
- not evidence, but mood-building
- attempts to derive legitimacy from the feeling that “everyone expects this”
3️⃣ “The national government” – building moral monopoly
Excerpt
“The national government…”
Technique
- linguistic appropriation
- moral labeling
- implicit exclusion
Goal
- suggest that the government = the nation
- therefore the opposition = less national or anti-national
Effect
- Fidesz appears not as a party, but as the sole legitimate representative of the nation
Real issue
- “national” is used as a legitimizing weapon, not a neutral description
- critics can easily be framed as opposing the nation itself
4️⃣ “They want to take what belongs to Hungarians” – grievance framing
Excerpt
“won’t let them take what belongs to Hungarians”
Technique
- victimhood framing
- looting metaphor
- moral outrage
Goal
- position voters as threatened victims
- trigger defensive emotional reactions
Effect
- easier identification with a “targeted community”
- strengthens the feeling that “we must defend ourselves”
Real issue
- vague: who is taking what and how is unclear
- ambiguity allows projection of multiple fears
5️⃣ “Kaposvár united against war” – local event as national will
Technique
- elevating a local event to national mandate
- crowd-based legitimacy
- street proof
Goal
- show that “the people” support the government
- turn a political rally into a symbol of public will
Effect
- crowd presence appears as evidence
- “if many people support it, it must be true”
Real issue
- a party event ≠ the will of society
- crowds do not replace factual argumentation
6️⃣ “Huge crowd,” “thousands,” “180,000” – appeal to numbers
Technique
- numerology
- social proof
- demonstration of strength
Goal
- create momentum and legitimacy
- pressure undecided voters
Effect
- numbers function as emotional evidence
- people confuse popularity with truth
Real issue
- numbers do not validate claims
- “we were many” proves nothing
7️⃣ “Hungary wants peace” – speaking for the entire nation
Technique
- totalizing generalization
- reducing national will to one emotion
- appropriation of collective will
Goal
- frame opposition as anti-peace
- turn political disagreement into moral conflict
Effect
- opponents can be labeled “pro-war”
- the speaker gains automatic moral superiority
Real issue
- desire for peace is nearly universal
- the real debate is about policy choices, not whether peace is desirable
8️⃣ “Europe is marching toward its own destruction” – apocalyptic framing
Excerpt
“Europe is marching toward its own destruction”
Technique
- doom narrative
- dramatic exaggeration
- civilizational threat framing
Goal
- amplify the stakes
- present Fidesz as the only rational actor
Effect
- fear and urgency
- complex EU debates reduced to life-or-death terms
Real issue
- rhetorical exaggeration
- emotional mobilization, not analysis
9️⃣ “We stand our ground” – heroic resistance myth
Technique
- heroization
- national defiance
- “fortress under siege” narrative
Goal
- build strong identity
- transform political loyalty into patriotic defense
Effect
- supporters feel like defenders, not just voters
- stronger group cohesion
Real issue
- emotional identity replaces policy discussion
🔟 Brussels + Ukraine + international capital – merged enemy image
Excerpt
“Neither international capital, nor Brussels, nor Ukraine…”
Technique
- constructing enemy blocs
- merging distinct actors into one threat
- external siege narrative
Goal
- create a simple, recognizable enemy
- reduce complexity to “they are attacking us”
Effect
- directs anger more easily
- discourages nuanced analysis
Real issue
- these actors have different interests
- merging them is propaganda, not analysis
1️⃣1️⃣ “Only the national government can guarantee this” – exclusivity claim
Technique
- false dilemma
- political monopoly building
- delegitimizing alternatives
Goal
- suggest there is no real choice
- frame replacing Fidesz as risky and dangerous
Effect
- undecided voters gravitate toward “safety”
- opposition appears inherently incapable
Real issue
- not evidence-based, but belief-driven
- classic power-preserving propaganda
1️⃣2️⃣ “The Tisza Party is pro-war” – labeling instead of argument
Excerpt
“pro-war allies”
Technique
- demonizing labeling
- guilt by association
- simplified moral categories
Goal
- portray the opponent as morally dangerous
- shift focus away from their actual positions
Effect
- policy debate disappears
- politics becomes about fear and betrayal
Real issue
- “pro-war” is often a label, not a precise position
1️⃣3️⃣ “They cannot say no to Brussels or Kyiv” – subordination narrative
Technique
- sovereignty fear
- suggesting external control
- vassal imagery
Goal
- portray the opposition as serving foreign interests
- position Fidesz as protector of sovereignty
Effect
- opponent becomes “foreign-controlled”
Real issue
- such labels rely on suspicion rather than proof
1️⃣4️⃣ “We will not pay Ukraine” – simplified coercion framing
Technique
- reducing complex international issues to financial grievance
- channeling anger
- triggering loss perception
Goal
- translate geopolitics into household economics
- portray outsiders as threats to family finances
Effect
- highly effective due to personal financial impact
Real issue
- slogan, not policy explanation
- oversimplifies multiple complex systems
1️⃣5️⃣ “A Kyiv puppet government” – conspiratorial power narrative
Technique
- puppet government framing
- fear of loss of sovereignty
- implied external intervention
Goal
- frame elections as a battle for national control
- delegitimize the opposition
Effect
- anger and defensive reflex
- opponent seen as a threat, not competitor
Real issue
- strong emotional impact, weak evidential basis
1️⃣6️⃣ “For them Ukraine, for us Hungary” – false binary
Technique
- binary framing
- moral simplification
- loyalty test
Goal
- reduce politics to two choices:
- Hungary
- Ukraine
Effect
- forces voters into a simplistic framework
- opposition appears unpatriotic
Real issue
- reality is more complex
- slogan replaces argument
1️⃣7️⃣ “All signs point to this” – confidence without evidence
Technique
- authoritative tone
- self-fulfilling narrative
- illusion of certainty
Goal
- convince people victory is already visible
- energize supporters
Effect
- reduces analytical thinking
Real issue
- no actual data presented
1️⃣8️⃣ “Analysts are backing away” – preemptive delegitimization
Technique
- discrediting experts
- preemptive defense
- undermining future criticism
Goal
- make opposing analysis seem suspicious
- shield narrative from data
Effect
- reduces trust in external sources
Real issue
- classic propaganda tactic: discredit expertise
1️⃣9️⃣ “They are making false claims” – total moral delegitimization
Technique
- broad discrediting
- accusation without evidence
- black-and-white morality
Goal
- invalidate critics without engaging arguments
Effect
- lowers expectation for proof
Real issue
- labeling replaces argument
2️⃣0️⃣ “We don’t want to become a Ukrainian colony” – colonization fear
Technique
- colonial metaphor
- sovereignty loss fear
- exaggerated identity threat
Goal
- trigger emotional rejection
- portray opponent as foreign agent
Effect
- election framed as national survival
Real issue
- extreme exaggeration
- emotional mobilization, not description
2️⃣1️⃣ “Peace-loving, cheerful people” – idealizing own camp
Technique
- positive identity construction
- emotional softening
- moral self-image
Goal
- make the group appealing and relatable
Effect
- masks aggressive polarization
Real issue
- contrasts with simultaneous enemy-building
Deeper Propaganda Structure
The full structure:
1. Creates a threat
- war
- Brussels
- Ukraine
- looting
- puppet government
2. Defines a victim
- Hungarians
- Hungarian families
- peace-loving people
3. Defines a savior
- Orbán
- national government
- Fidesz
4. Eliminates alternatives
- only they can protect the country
This is the core architecture of propaganda.
The Strongest Manipulation
The strongest element is not a single sentence, but this:
It frames political competition not as a contest of programs, but as a struggle for national survival.
So in the voter’s mind:
- if Fidesz loses → war
- if Fidesz loses → Hungarians are looted
- if Fidesz loses → foreign puppet government
- if Fidesz loses → Hungary is lost
This is not ordinary campaigning, but totalizing, fear-based propaganda.
Summary
Main propaganda tools:
- fearmongering
- enemy construction
- false dilemma
- appropriation of national identity
- monopolization of “peace”
- demonization of opponents
- appeal to crowds
- pre-declared victory
- delegitimization of experts
- sovereignty panic
Main goal:
not to persuade with arguments, but to emotionally steer the audience toward a single conclusion:
only Fidesz = peace, everyone else = danger
Core problem:
it does not analyze reality, but constructs a simplified worldview based on fear and tribal loyalty.