On Wednesday Csaba Dömötör, Parliamentary State Secretary at the Cabinet Office of the Prime Minister, told Hungarian News Agency MTI that the October referendum on the mandatory relocation quotas has never been as timely as it is now.
Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Levente Magyar held talks with American Jewish organisations in New York.
Japanese automobile electrical equipment manufacturer Mitsuba is expanding its production and storage capacities at its plant in Salgótarján; a section of the new facility was officially inaugurated on Wednesday.
Japanese automobile electrical equipment manufacturer Mitsuba is expanding its production and storage capacities at its plant in Salgótarján; a section of the new facility was officially inaugurated on Wednesday.
“Brussels is ‘afraid of the Hungarian referendum’, so it is trying to somehow avoid its political consequences’, Minister in charge of the Cabinet Office of the Prime Minister Antal Rogán said on Wednesday evening at a forum in Budapest.
After a joint border inspection with Bulgarian prime minister Boyko Borissov on Wednesday, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said that everyone must understand that Europe’s future will not be decided in Brussels, but “here, where we are standing, at the Bulgarian-Turkish border”.
Central and Eastern Europe may be EU’s growth engine in the next 10-15 years, but to reach this goal we require a competent situation analysis, adequate responses and immense preparations, Minister for National Economy Mihály Varga said at an international conference entitled “From crisis management to launching economic growth”, organized by the Ministry for National Economy.
Prior to a public forum at a press conference in Bicske on Tuesday, Károly Kontrát, Parliamentary State Secretary at the Ministry of Interior, said that the latest plans for the Bicske reception centre are that it will close on 31 December 2016; therefore no more migrants are currently arriving at the camp.
According to Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade Péter Szijjártó, the comments against Hungary made by Luxembourgian Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn and European Parliament (EP) President Martin Schultz are severely worsening the European crisis.
The Government and economic partners share the opinion that the next phase of reducing public burdens should include the lowering of social contributions.