
🚨 Today, in this age of dangers, when Europe is on the verge of becoming involved in a war, we cannot take the risk of entrusting the country to a weak-charactered, unserious person like Péter Magyar.
Someone who ends up at drug-fueled parties and crawls at the feet of young women should be applying for a reality show, not for the office of prime minister.
👉 When Brussels leaders speak almost daily about the need to be prepared for war, we need a strong, calm leader who represents Hungarian interests — Viktor Orbán — someone capable of saying no to both Brussels and Kyiv. That is why Fidesz is the safe choice.
I believe that in such a tense geopolitical situation, with a war taking place next door and Europe preparing to become involved, these statements are not exaggerated at all. And I think that a Péter Magyar who behaves like that at a party belongs more in a reality show villa than in the prime minister’s chair. On which foreign trip would he be approached by some, I don’t know, attractive intelligence agent — just to say something absurd? This is a serious profession. Being Prime Minister of Hungary in 2026, in the neighborhood of a war, while numerous European leaders openly say — from “ReArm Europe 2030,” to Weber, the German chancellor, British and French chiefs of staff, the NATO Secretary General — that we are heading toward war, that a war awaits us, that people and weapons may need to be sent — in such a situation, it is simply impossible to place such a weak character, such an unserious person, someone who could be blackmailed in a second, into such a responsible position.
1️⃣ Existential Threat Framing (“the age of dangers,” “Europe is preparing for war”)
📌 Technique:
Dramatizing the current geopolitical situation and evoking a constant wartime atmosphere.
🎯 Goal:
To elevate the election into a matter of survival rather than a political competition.
💥 Effect:
The audience does not weigh policy programs but instead seeks security.
“Stability” becomes the primary value.
2️⃣ Character Assassination (Ad Hominem Attack) – Discrediting Péter Magyar Personally
📌 Technique:
– “drug party”
– “crawling under young girls’ feet”
– “belongs in a reality show”
– “weak character”
Attacking private life, morality, and personal integrity instead of political competence.
🎯 Goal:
To frame the opponent as incompetent and unserious.
💥 Effect:
The audience does not assess professional capability but experiences moral disgust.
3️⃣ Blackmail Vulnerability Narrative
📌 Technique:
“He would be blackmailed in the second minute.”
References to intelligence manipulation.
🎯 Goal:
To transform a political debate into a national security issue.
💥 Effect:
Voters stop asking, “Does he have a better program?”
Instead, they ask, “Does he pose a danger to the country?”
4️⃣ Invocation of External Authorities
📌 Technique:
– “Redinesz 2030”
– Weber
– the German Chancellor
– British–French chiefs of staff
– NATO Secretary General
Appeal to authority.
🎯 Goal:
To present the war narrative not as a personal opinion but as an international consensus.
💥 Effect:
The audience feels that “everyone is saying this.”
5️⃣ Black-and-White Electoral Framing
📌 Technique:
“Weak, unserious man” vs. “strong, calm leader.”
🎯 Goal:
To simplify the political landscape into a binary choice between two personalities.
💥 Effect:
Nuance disappears.
The decision becomes identity-based.
6️⃣ The “Safe Choice” Closing Line
📌 Technique:
Promise of security (“Fidesz is the safe choice”).
🎯 Goal:
To provide emotional reassurance in response to fear.
💥 Effect:
Fear → Solution → Loyalty.
📌 Summary
This communication strategy is built on three main psychological axes:
- Fear (war, blackmail, instability)
- Disgust / moral rejection (personal discrediting)
- Promise of security (strong-leader narrative)
As a result, the debate shifts away from policy programs and toward a framing of competence vs. danger and stability vs. chaos.