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“There are two battlefields now, two front lines,” Viktor Orbán said on state radio Friday morning. The two front lines: hospitals and schools. The latter is important because it has saved jobs, since if the father cannot inject the child, he will have to stay home and his livelihood will be jeopardized.
“When it comes to hospitals, I still don’t see encouraging signs.”said Orbán, who is optimistic, but not because the data has improved overnight, and also, more and more people are hospitalized.
“Now I come from the operational staff meeting and I can see that it is at an altitude of 9,500 today, so we will soon reach 10,000 patients in hospital beds.”If this is the case, it is very surprising, because on Thursday up to 7,500 infected people could be known in hospitals, according to official data. And it doesn’t seem realistic to have jumped two thousand in one day.
Is it possible that Orbán was referring not only to the infected but to all hospital patients, including non-crowns? It’s conceivable, although he talked about infection numbers and epidemic data throughout:
There was talk of screening educators, social and health workers, which he said should be done “in a paramilitary system.” He says that quite a few teachers refuse to take the test, so we can have a generally valid picture of the infection situation early next week. Of the medical students who participated in the trials, he said, “Very good, young intact.”
It turned out that if there was a vaccine, 13 thousand sites are planned to be vaccinated, and it will be possible to register by mail and online. He still did not know what to say about the epidemiological measures that would be at Christmas.
He doesn’t want to compromise
The first half of the 26 minute interview was about immigration and György Soros. The initial fund was, of course, the Polish-Hungarian veto, which prevented the approval of the next EU budget and the recovery fund. The two countries are protesting against the rule of law mechanism, and on Thursday jointly said they would not allow it.
“I don’t want to compromise,” Orbán said, but he wants a solution. “Our position is a concrete force”, but the others can be changed because he thinks it has a political base. Then he came up with a repeat and recently repeated explanation that the rule of law mechanism was actually about immigration. “Hungary belongs to the Hungarians” – assumed the far-right slogan Jobbik in 2009.
However, the rule of law criteria should not be linked to immigration, but in some way to EU money, as is currently the case with the agreement that is currently in force, but it is not clear that this may include immigration.
“He weaves the web like a spider,” said de Soros, who “would be better off going home” to the United States.
Péter Magyari writes in detail about the situation in his analysis on Friday morning. It turns out that the draft law on the rule of law, finalized in the autumn, is in line with the principles set out in July, which even Hungary and Poland have embarked on. According to them, the two things are not the same, and apparently the debate is whether starting a sentence with “in light of everything” will go back to the previous one.
What is really at stake in the debate is whether the EU will have to support a new political structure in its Member States that is at the height of regime change.
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