
Thousands protest in Budapest against the Hungarian government
The European Commission has unlocked EUR 16.4 billion in funds that it had retained in the face of democratic backwardness and systemic corruption during the
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Summary
The European Commission unlocked EUR 16.4 billion in funds that it had retained in the face of democratic backwardness and systemic corruption during the governments of Orbán. In his appeal, Fidesz, who under the leadership of Orbán ruled for 16 consecutive years before losing the legislative elections last April, said that the current government "dismounts the rule of law and institutionalizes tyranny". In addition, the measures introduced aim to allow the destitution of the current president, Tamás Sulyok, a politician loyal to Orbán, and to create a public entity to recover funds allegedly diverted by oligarchs close to the regime of the former president.
Furthermore, After taking office in May, the Government of Magyar quickly came to fulfill other campaign promises, such as the suspension of the Hungarian public television and radio news service, which Magyar argues to serve as a "advertising factory" for the party of Orbán. Under the slogan ‘Stop tyranny’, several thousand people, according to the Hvg.hu portal, gathered in front of the seat of the presidency in Buda Castle. He also implemented an eight-year term limit for prime ministers and removed the heads of national security and intelligence agencies who served during Orbán's mandate.
Cross-referenced from 3 sources.
Factual coreconfirmed by several independent voices
The European Commission unlocked EUR 16.4 billion in funds that it had retained in the face of democratic backwardness and systemic corruption during the governments of Orbán.
reliability low1/3 sourcesIn his appeal, Fidesz, who under the leadership of Orbán ruled for 16 consecutive years before losing the legislative elections last April, said that the current government "dismounts the rule of law and institutionalizes tyranny".
reliability low1/3 sourcesIn addition, the measures introduced aim to allow the destitution of the current president, Tamás Sulyok, a politician loyal to Orbán, and to create a public entity to recover funds allegedly diverted by oligarchs close to the regime of the former president.
reliability low1/3 sourcesAfter taking office in May, the Government of Magyar quickly came to fulfill other campaign promises, such as the suspension of the Hungarian public television and radio news service, which Magyar argues to serve as a "advertising factory" for the party of Orbán.
reliability low1/3 sourcesUnder the slogan ‘Stop tyranny’, several thousand people, according to the Hvg.hu portal, gathered in front of the seat of the presidency in Buda Castle.
reliability low1/3 sources
Reported detailssecondary facts, each attributed to its source
He also implemented an eight-year term limit for prime ministers and removed the heads of national security and intelligence agencies who served during Orbán's mandate.
according to Notícias ao Minuto — Mundo +1
Disputedincompatible versions — to verify
No factual contradiction detected between sources.
Framing by sidesame fact, different words — loaded terms highlighted
No notable framing divergence.
Blind spotwhat one side keeps silent
No blind spot detected: every side covers the same facts.
Sources3 sources cross-checked
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