Socialists’ PM candidate promises equality, more justice

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Budapest (MTI) – László Botka, the opposition Socialist Party’s prime minister candidate for the 2018 elections, said on Saturday that his most important goal was to create equality, improve justice and promote Hungary’s rise.
Hungarians want a change and want leaders who do not praise the pre-WW2 Horthy era and do not try to stealthily restore the Kádár era either, Botka told an event organised by the party’s Free Press Foundation.
Hungarians also reject the self-destructive politics of the pre-2010 governments but also reject the arrogance and especially the conspicuous consumption of the power elite since 2010, he added.
Botka called it Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s biggest betrayal that “he went against his own promises and was not working towards Hungarians’ interests.” The difference in income between the poorest and richest groups in society increased by eight-fold since 2010 and as many as half million Hungarians left the country seeking better living standards, he added.
Once in government, he said the first move of the new left will be to set the health sector in order by stopping health employees leave the sector and shortening waiting lists.
The Socialist PM candidate promised to reform education by placing emphasis on marketable skills and shifting the focus from lexical knowledge to creativity. He also promised to fight corruption and to eliminate the gap between people on the right and the left, between conservatives and liberals.
Botka said that the Socialists would never again “leave their voters in the lurch” and he promised not to strike an alliance with the Jobbik party.
He said that the parties of the democratic opposition should regain voters’ confidence almost from scratch.
“We need all democratic voters but not all politicians. Those who are a burden and have lost their chances and public confidence should withdraw,” he said.
Those who wish to offer a credible programme to voters in the 2018 elections should draw the conclusions from the blunders made by the leftist-liberal governments of the 2002-2010 period, he said.





