
Two-thirds of Hungarians support the introduction of a protected price at gas stations. Tisza supporters do not like it; they want to pay market prices!
I have seen all those videos where a journalist, at a Tisza rally — that is, during one of Péter Magyar’s nationwide campaign stops — asks the participants what they think about the protected price, about the fact that the government intervened in fuel prices so that they cannot be sold for more than 5.95 or 6.15, and several of those answering the reporter say that they do not yet know what they think, and that Péter will soon tell them.
Fortunately, a real survey has been conducted, a representative survey, published just a few minutes ago. It says that two-thirds of Hungarians, 67%, support the introduction of the protected price; this is, in fact, what common sense dictates. Opposition voters, Tisza supporters — that Tisza one-third — on the other hand, do not support it.
Once again, this shows — just as in the survey concerning Ukraine’s accession to the European Union — that if Tisza were in power, there would be no protected price. Then people would already have to pay 50 to 60 forints more for fuel than under the protected price. And if Tisza were in power, then, for example, there would also be Ukrainian accession, meaning they would send all of Hungarians’ money to Ukraine. And I could go on listing how many problems a Tisza government would bring upon us, which is why we must not vote for them.
1️⃣ Emphasizing the will of the majority (bandwagon framing)
Excerpt
“Two-thirds of Hungarians support the introduction of a protected price at gas stations.”
Technique
The communication suggests that
➡️ the majority has already decided what the correct position is.
Key elements
- “two-thirds”
- “67%”
- “Hungarians”
This is a classic bandwagon effect.
Goal
- to make the reader feel that this is the “normal” or mainstream position
- anyone who disagrees belongs to the minority
Effect
People tend to align themselves with the majority.
2️⃣ Creating an enemy group
Excerpt
“TISZA supporters don’t like it; they want to pay market prices.”
Technique
The communication divides society into two camps:
“Hungarians”
vs.
“TISZA supporters”
This is ingroup–outgroup framing.
Goal
- strengthen political identity
- portray the opponent as a separate group
Effect
The audience may start to think in terms of:
- “us” vs. “them”
- “they are acting against Hungarian interests”
3️⃣ Portraying the political opponent as incompetent
Excerpt
“We don’t yet know what we think; Péter will soon tell us.”
Technique
Opposition voters are depicted as followers who do not think independently.
This is delegitimization framing.
Goal
To portray the opponent’s supporters as
manipulated people.
Effect
The reader may conclude that:
- “they don’t think for themselves”
- “they just repeat what their leader tells them”
4️⃣ The “common sense” argument
Excerpt
“This is what common sense dictates.”
Technique
A political position is presented as an obvious truth.
This is common sense framing.
Goal
- to shut down debate
- to portray the opposing position as irrational
Effect
The reader may feel that:
- “if I disagree, I must be unreasonable”
5️⃣ Economic fear appeal
Excerpt
“You would have to pay 50–60 forints more for fuel.”
Technique
The message highlights a specific financial loss.
This is an economic fear appeal.
Goal
To make the issue directly affect the voter’s wallet.
Effect
The reader may think:
- “life would become more expensive”
6️⃣ Linking it to other controversial issues (issue bundling)
Excerpt
“Ukraine’s EU accession would also happen.”
Technique
One issue (fuel prices) is linked to a completely different political issue.
This is issue bundling.
Goal
To bundle several fears together:
- fuel prices
- Ukraine
- sending money abroad
Effect
A large combined threat narrative forms in the reader’s mind.
7️⃣ Narrative of losing national resources
Excerpt
“All the Hungarian people’s money would be sent to Ukraine.”
Technique
This is a national resource loss narrative.
Goal
To frame the opponent as someone who
does not represent Hungarian interests.
Effect
The reader may feel that:
- “our money will be taken away”
- “other countries will get it”
8️⃣ Listing apocalyptic consequences
Excerpt
“How many problems a TISZA government would bring upon us.”
Technique
The opponent coming to power is portrayed as a catastrophe.
This is doom framing.
Goal
To strengthen voter mobilization.
Effect
The election appears as a defensive act against danger.
Summary
The text simultaneously uses:
- majority pressure
- economic fear appeals
- enemy-image construction
- national resource narratives
- bundling multiple political issues together
This is typical campaign rhetoric, whose purpose is not detailed policy debate but:
➡️ emotional mobilization
➡️ delegitimizing the opponent
➡️ influencing voting decisions.