The Parliament website has stated that on Monday Prime Minister Viktor Orbán submitted to the National Assembly his proposal for a constitutional amendment which would ban the collective relocation of non-Hungarians to Hungary.
The Prime Minister has said that on Monday he would submit to Parliament a Bill for amendment of the Constitution in relation to the referendum on migrant quotas. Viktor Orbán spoke about this on Kossuth Radio’s “Sunday News” programme, stating that he was counting on the support of every Member of Parliament for the amendment, which will clearly state that non-Hungarians shall not be collectively settled in Hungary.
After talks in Bratislava with his Slovak counterpart Robert Fico, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said that the mandatory resettlement quotas must be removed from the European Union’s agenda, once and for all.
The time has come for elevating cooperation between Central-Europe and China to a higher level, the level of strategic partnership, and this could take place next year, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said at the conference Dialogue Between China and the Central-Eastern-European Political Parties held on Thursday in Budapest.
In Budapest early on Thursday morning, after the Counter-Terrorism Centre (TEK) held an exercise at Ferenc Puskás Stadium metro station, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said that “We must be at least as tough as the terrorists”.
“On Friday, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán will be holding a meeting with Robert Fico, the Prime Minister of Slovakia, which currently holds the Presidency of the European Union”, Head of the Prime Minister’s Press Office Bertalan Havasi told kormany.hu.
Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has sent an official letter to President of the European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker, informing him of the result of the 2 October quota referendum.
Head of the Prime Minister’s Press Office Bertalan Havasi told Hungarian news agency MTI on Wednesday that “In the interests of the successful amendment of the Fundamental Law, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, the President of Fidesz, is ready to hold discussions with the presidents of all political parties that have parliamentary groups”.
“Prime Minister Viktor Orbán will be taking part in an event commemorating the 1956 Hungarian Revolution in Bavaria on 17 October”, head of the Prime Minister’s Press Office Bertalan Havasi informed Hungarian news agency MTI on Wednesday, confirming German news reports.
At a press conference in the Parliament Building on Tuesday, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said that “The fact that in the referendum on 2 October there was a 98 per cent majority voting ‘no’ to mandatory relocation means that a new unity has been established in Hungary: a unity beyond party politics, which regards protecting our sovereignty as a national issue”.