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The fall part-session is over and the parliamentary work is due to be completed by 2020. This year a ranking of the most active and passive MPs can also be established.
According to statistics available on the Parliament website, the leader of the LMP group László László Keresztes He spoke the most, 306 times, and therefore the longest in total (22 hours 21 minutes 32 seconds) in Parliament.
Follows second Bence Rétvári, KNDP Parliamentary Secretary of State in the Ministry of Human Resources – had 293 speeches and spoke for a total of almost 15 hours.
Podium still Nacsa Lőrinc KNDP MPs made 260 speeches, speaking in parliament for almost 18 hours. Prime Minister Viktor Orbán ranks seventh with 137 speeches.
The top ten places:
- László László Keresztes (LMP) – 306 speeches
- Bence Rétvári (KDNP) – 293 speeches
- Nacsa Lőrinc (KDNP) – 260 speeches
- Z. Kárpát Dániel (Jobbik) – 182 speeches
- Gergely Arató (DK) – 152 speeches
- László Varju (DK) – 147 speeches
- Viktor Orban (Fidesz) – 137 speeches
- András Tállai (Fidesz) – 130 speeches
- Péter Szijjártó (Fidesz) – 116 speeches
- Attila Mesterházy (MSZP) – 111 speeches
The first woman in the ranking is ranked 12 in MSZP Ildikó Bangóné Borbély, who He got up to speak 107 times. In second place among the female representatives, but in position 19 in the general classification is Varga-Damm Andrea with 81 speeches, followed by the MSZP in 20th place – with 80 speeches Gurmai Zita.
The Faction Leaders ‘Competition’ is led by Lórló Keresztes László from LMP, followed by:
- in 38th place – with 55 speeches – leader of the KDNP faction, István Simicskó
- in 39th place, with 53 speeches, the leader of the Jobbik group, Jakab Péter
- in position 46, with 44 interventions, the leader of the Dialogue Group, Tímea Szabó
- in 50th place – with 38 speeches – the leader of the MSZP faction, Bertalan Tóth
- in 69th place – with 26 speeches – the leader of the Fidesz faction, Maté Kocsis
- in place 101, with 15 speeches, leader of the Democratic Coalition Group, Ferenc Gyurcsány
At the bottom of the full list are MEPs who have never spoken in parliament this year:
- Judge Mark (Fidesz)
- Florian Farkas (Fidesz)
- Ákos Hadházy (Independent)
- János Kerényi (Fidesz)
- Gábor Kubatov (Fidesz)
- János Lázár (Fidesz)
- Jenő Manninger (Fidesz)
- Marius Révész (Fidesz)
- Rogan Antal (Fidesz)
- György Simonka (Fidesz)
- Zoltán Tessely (Fidesz)
According to the statistics, Márk Bíró, Flórián Farkas, János Kerényi, Gábor Kubatov and Antal Rogán are considered veterans when it comes to silence, because they have not spoken anything in this cycle.
If we look at the data for May 8, 2018, the current cycle start date, the first ten rankings change as follows:
- Bence Rétvári (KDNP) – 756 speeches
- Z. Kárpát Dániel (Jobbik) – 483 speeches
- Nacsa Lőrinc (KDNP) – 467 speeches
- László László Keresztes (LMP) – 451 speeches
- Gergely Arató (DK) – 382 speeches
- Bence Tordai (Dialogue) – 302 speeches
- László Varju (DK) – 292 speeches
- Paul Völner (Fidesz) – 282 speeches
- Viktor Orban (Fidesz) – 260 speeches
- Varga-Damm Andrea (Jobbik) – 251 speeches
In our series on politicians’ salaries, we wrote about how much MPs officially earn:
The monthly parliamentary allowance for the period from March 1 of the current year to the end of February of the following year is three times the average monthly gross income of the national economy for the year prior to the current year, officially published by the Central Statistical Office (CSO).
In other words, the base salary of a representative is currently gross monthly. 1 103 400 florin.
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