Pro-government analysts assess the EP elections

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The result achieved by the ruling alliance of Fidesz and the Christian Democratic People’s Party (KDNP) in the European parliamentary elections “would probably have earned them a two-thirds majority” in a general election, according to analysts who spoke at a roundtable discussion organised by the Nézőpont Institute and Mandiner on Monday.

Analysts of the Center for Fundamental Rights, the Nézőpont Institute, the Századvég Foundation and the XXI. Szazad Institute agreed that Fidesz and KDNP had achieved “a very good result” considering the war, the difficult circumstances, and that they are in the middle of their term.

Sunday’s elections, they said, had proven that “Hungary is a right-wing country”.

Presenting the think-tank’s model, Nézőpont Institute director Ágoston Sámuel Mráz said that an identical outcome in a general election would have translated to 135 parliamentary seats for Fidesz-KDNP, 45 for the Party of Respect and Freedom (Tisza), 10 for the left-wing alliance comprising the Democratic Coalition (DK), the Socialist Party and Dialogue-Greens and 8 seats for the Our Homeland Movement. He said that as long as the opposition was fragmented and support for the ruling parties was as high as it is now, Fidesz-KDNP was likely to win a two-thirds majority in every election.

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