idiot Orbán propagandist

Have you seen the latest Medián poll? Of course I have — it’s fake, as usual, fake. What’s interesting, and I don’t know if you’ve seen it, is that the Democratic Coalition has gone after Medián. They claim that the polling company asked them for money, they didn’t pay, and that’s why — according to DK — they are being measured lower than they really are.

I don’t know. What is certain is that here, in our own constituency, we have a fresh poll. I already talked about it in a video last night, and here, for example, the DK individual candidate is much stronger than the Tisza one. We’ll see how this turns out.


1️⃣ “Fake, as usual” – pre-emptive delegitimization

Technique: discrediting without evidence
Labeling the Medián poll as automatically “fake” pre-empts any substantive debate.
👉 Goal: to trigger an emotional reflex in the audience (“this is obviously a lie”) before any numbers or methodology are discussed.


2️⃣ DK vs. Medián – amplifying a trust conflict

Technique: implying an institutional conspiracy
According to the narrative, the Democratic Coalition is performing worse because it refused to pay Medián.
👉 This is a serious allegation, yet no evidence is presented. The aim is not to prove the claim, but to undermine trust in the poll itself.


3️⃣ “We have our own poll” – constructing a parallel reality

Technique: introducing counter-data from an unverifiable source
The reference to a “local” and “fresh” poll comes with:

  • no methodology,
  • no sample size,
  • no publicly verifiable data.

👉 Function: to neutralize the national poll without actually refuting it.


4️⃣ “The DK candidate is stronger than the Tisza one” – wedge-driving narrative

Technique: opposition fragmentation
Emphasizing that the DK candidate is stronger than the Tisza Party’s candidate:

  • relativizes Tisza’s national momentum,
  • fuels local rivalry,
  • creates uncertainty among opposition voters.

5️⃣ “We’ll see what happens” – an exit-ramp conclusion

Technique: diffusing responsibility
The closing line leaves all scenarios open:

  • if Medián turns out to be right → “we said there was a dispute anyway,”
  • if not → “see, the local poll was what mattered.”

🔎 Overall picture

This statement does not analyze the substance of the poll. Instead, it:

  • attacks the pollster,
  • introduces an alternative (unverifiable) dataset, and
  • conducts a political positioning battle within the opposition.