Sunday, 6 April 2014

Hungary's Orban seeks new poll win/must visit

Poster of Viktor Orban on a house wall in Budapest (3 April 2014) Viktor Orban's ruling Fidesz party swept to power in 2010 Hungary's populist Prime Minister Viktor Orban and his right-wing Fidesz party are seeking another term in office in elections on Sunday.


Fidesz is expected to win between 45 and 50% of the vote, polls suggest.


The centre-left opposition is facing a close race for second place with the far-right Jobbik party.


The Hungarian left has never fully recovered from its heavy defeat in the 2010 ballot, in which Mr Orban swept to power with a two-thirds majority.


The election is mainly being fought over the state of the economy, correspondents say.

Softer image Socialist leader Attila Mesterhazy, who heads an opposition coalition of five parties, said he could still defeat Mr Orban, despite trailing behind in opinion polls with around 25%.


"I don't care about the polls, people are afraid of expressing their views," Mr Mesterhazy said earlier at a small rally in the capital, Budapest.


"I believe I will be prime minister."


Critics say the state of democracy in Hungary has been eroded under his premiership.

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"Hungary is performing better!" is the message plastered on the country's buses, trams and roadside billboards ”

End Quote Nick Thorpe BBC News Budapest The opposition - composed of five leftist and centrist parties - also accuses Mr Orban of curtailing civil liberties and harming free speech.


But Fidesz has insisted that reform was needed in order to complete the work of eradicating the legacy of Communism from the country, and reduce the budget deficit to below the EU's required 3% of gross domestic product.


Mr Orban's populist and Eurosceptic approach has proven popular with many Hungarians.


"The left had eight years to show what they can do, and they showed us all right," he told Hungarian media on Saturday.


"Why on Earth should we believe that the same people and the same parties would not do the same if given another opportunity?"


Jobbik is also expected to do well in Sunday's election, potentially receiving up to 20% of the vote.


Observers say the far-right party's adoption of a softer image has paid dividends, as a recent opinion poll found leader Gabor Vona to be the most popular opposition politician.


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