Opposition Parties Propose Mandatory Debate For PM Candidates

  • 13 Feb 2018 7:20 AM
  • Hungary Matters
Opposition Parties Propose Mandatory Debate For PM Candidates
The allied Socialist and Párbeszéd opposition parties have proposed a law amendment under which the two candidates for prime minister who have the highest chances of being elected would be obliged to debate publicly two days before the April 8 general election.

Gergely Karácsony, PM candidate of the two parties, told a press conference on Friday that there were “ever fewer meaningful debates” nowadays.

“Whoever is louder and has more billboards can go on lying without restraint because they don’t face counter-arguments,” he said.

“We want a law that makes the debate happen because as things stand, the unwritten rules of democracy are not enough and Prime Minister Viktor Orbán thinks he can shun them,” Karácsony said, adding he was ready to challenge Orbán to a debate.

“I am prepared for the debate, and thing that truth is on my side. And I feel that if someone is afraid to sit down for a debate with me, that person does in fact not dare to engage in a debate with the truth and wants to go on lying further on,” he said.

Karácsony stressed the need that all parties fielding a national list for the April ballot should be given a chance for expounding their views because the election “will also be about which parties win parliamentary mandates, not only about who will be Hungary’s next prime minister.”

  • How does this content make you feel?

XpatLoop Media Partner

Hungary Matters

Launched in January 2014, this newsletter published on week days covers 'everything you need to know about what’s going on in Hungary and beyond', according to its publisher the state media agency MTI.

  • Truth About Tisza Tax Plans: Massive Leaflet Campaigns Started in Hungary

    Truth About Tisza Tax Plans: Massive Leaflet Campaigns Started in Hungary

    • 16 Sep 2025 2:58 PM

    The Tisza Party launched a nationwide leaflets campaign on the weekend, setting forth its tax reduction plans in response to a Fidesz campaign accusing Tisza of planning to raise taxes. Fidesz will send four million leaflets carrying this message to Hungarian households, twice as many as the two million copies of the Tisza publication. Magyar said that they will reach all Hungarian settlements with “the truth” before October 23. Fidesz caucus leader Máté Kocsis announced on Saturday that by October 1 four million leaflets will be sent out about the Tisza Party’s “tax-raising plans”. These will be relayed to all mailboxes with the help of 10,000 volunteers, he added.