• @alokir
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    261 year ago

    The funny things is that despite all the nationalistic rhetoric, Orbán would rather build relations with Fico because they’re both pro-Russia than the Hungarian minority parties.

    • @what_is_a_name
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      471 year ago

      It’s not about pro Russia. It’s about being pro corruption and oligarchy.

      • @alokir
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, that’s what I think, too. Orbán seems to jump from far left to far right rhetoric depending on which voter block he wants to pander to, just to stay in power.

        I don’t think most controversial things that he pushes matters to him as much as power and money, the only thing that I think he’s really passionate about is fixing our demographic issues.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    81 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Still, the shape of Slovakia’s next government remains unclear and much will depend on complex coalition-building with smaller parties, including Peter Pellegrini’s Hlas and Igor Matovič’s OĽaNO.

    A government led by Fico and his Smer-SSD party would see Nato member Slovakia joining Hungary in challenging the European Union’s consensus on support for Ukraine just as the bloc looks to maintain unity in opposing Russia’s invasion.

    “We do want to evaluate everything, so we will wait for the final count,” said Robert Kalinak, a Smer-SSD candidate and long-time Fico ally, adding the party would comment on the full results later on Sunday.

    The PS party has advocated maintaining Slovakia’s strong backing for Ukraine, and would also likely follow a liberal line within the EU on issues such as majority voting to make the bloc more flexible, green policies and LGBTQ+ rights.

    “It remains our aim for Slovakia to have after this election a stable pro-European government that will care for the rule of law and which begins to solve and invest into areas key for our future,” Simecka, a European parliament member and former reporter and Oxford graduate, told supporters.

    Fico’s views reflect traditionally warm sentiments towards Russia among many Slovaks, which have gathered strength on social media since the Ukraine war started.


    The original article contains 591 words, the summary contains 212 words. Saved 64%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    We should accept that the wind is changing, he has been democratically elected. People are tired to spend money in a war (fought by and for foreigners) which in their idea is making the economy collapse by subtracting assets where they could have been spent locally. It’s a simplification, it’s wrong (partly or totally, depends on one’s opinion) but it is credible and it works as a slogan. Especially when the only communication strategy of the counterpart it’s “we’re right and you are an sh–hole, shame on you f–ing retrograde moron”.