Orbán’s interview about migration, energy price cuts and other interesting topics

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Budapest, December 2 (MTI) – The Hungarian government will not allow Brussels to interfere with the decision-making of the authorities over energy prices, the prime minister said in an interview to public radio on Friday.

Viktor Orbán said that if the right of authorities to determine energy prices were to be taken away then the government’s scheme to keep utility bills low would be compromised.

He insisted that competition in the energy sector did not lead to lower prices due to “all sorts of backroom deals”, and prices would rise instead.

The government will defend low utility bills, and while the struggle will be hard “we have every chance of success,” Orbán said.

Orbán said Hungary’s unemployment rate, below 5 percent, goes to show that people who are willing to work can work. He added, however, that the state of the country’s labour market is still not ideal due to regional inequalities and that employees do not always get the jobs they want. “But at least we can say that everyone has access to some kind of a job.” Orbán said that “even in the worst-case scenario”, people at least have access to jobs within the fostered work scheme.

He said the logic behind the government’s recent economic policy decisions was that every employer willing to raise wages would be given tax breaks.

The state of the Hungarian economy is now better than at any time since 1990, he said. “It’s not that we’ve arrived; we’re on the road [in the right] direction towards success.”

Orbán said Hungary was now “on the winning team” of countries, which he said had not been the case for a long time.

“Slowly but surely, Hungary is going from being a black sheep to becoming a success story,” the prime minister insisted.

Commenting on German projections that see that country’s economy slowing down until 2018, Orbán said the world was “more than just Germany”, noting his government’s eastern and southern opening policies.

Govts that fail to grasp opposition to migration destined to fall

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said on Friday that he expects governments that fail to understand that people are opposed to migration would eventually be ousted.

“This is only a matter of time … but we have to hold out until democracy is restored,” the prime minister told public Kossuth Radio.

“Democracy in Europe has been upset. There is no democratic balance because the people are not on board with what their leaders want to force onto them.”

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