
Brussels Establishment Silent as Bulgarians Back EU Critic for PM
One pro-EU official has described the result of the Bulgaria election as “deeply concerning.”

One pro-EU official has described the result of the Bulgaria election as “deeply concerning.”

In a video message, Rassemblement National politician Florian Philippot criticised the ban on the dinner meeting in the capital of Belgium, describing it as “the country of surrealism.”

Mayor of Saint-Gilles Jean Spinette said “We must all stand up and say enough is enough.”

Péter Magyar is determined to starve out Brussels’ most influential conservative think tank but its leadership believes the organization will continue to exist and gain weight as the European Right’s intellectual hub.

Jubilant reactions from EU figures reveal how pivotal Hungary had become in opposing further centralisation—but Patriots for Europe are “more united than ever” in their mission to defend the sovereignty of Europe’s nations.

For years, it was claimed that Viktor Orbán had turned Hungary into an autocracy where political alternation was impossible. Last night’s election proved the opposite.

“If the European Union starts to consider democratically elected governments illegitimate simply because they do not share the dominant political line in Brussels, then the problem is no longer Viktor Orbán.”

“What bothers Brussels is not just that Hungary stands out, but that this alternative could become popular among a majority of Europeans over time.”

Brussels avoids speaking about it openly but the ghost of the 2020 COVID-19 crisis is beginning to reappear in the corridors of the EU.

The Brussels- and Kyiv-aligned ecosystem that produces inflated polling numbers is now preparing the next step: if Péter Magyar wins, it is democracy; if he loses, it must be fraud or ‘foreign interference.’