The overwhelming majority of Central Europeans (70 percent) consider their countries family-friendly, but the population of V4 countries do even more so at 74 percent.
"Right-wing media started out at an unfair disadvantage in the 1990s, as former Communists appeared in the Hungarian public wearing a disguise of professionalism, and the Right lost the non-existent media war there and then".
The Nézőpont Institute inquired about the chances of the mayoral race in Budapest with a representative method including a sample of 500 people of the capital's voters. Just like in 2018 on a national level, there are no signs of a possible willing to change in 2019 within the capital.
More than half of the voters (53 percent) continues to sympathize with the government parties, according to a personal opinion poll including 5000 people conducted by the Nézőpont Institute in June, following the EP elections.
70 per cent of Hungarians, that is equal to 5,6 million voters, including 1 million Budapest citizens eligible to vote would not like to see Ferenc Gyurcsány in a relevant political position – a survey by Nézőpont Institute showed.