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Political party in Hungary
The MIÉP–Jobbik Third Way Alliance of Parties (MIÉP–Jobbik a Harmadik Út pártszövetség ) was an
electoral alliance in
Hungary led by
István Csurka (
Hungarian Justice and Life Party ) and
Dávid Kovács (
Jobbik ). In 2005, the
Hungarian Justice and Life Party (MIÉP) joined forces with a newer political party, namely the
Jobbik (Movement for a Better Hungary), and some members of the agricultural
Independent Smallholders Party . The new political formation was registered under the name "Third Way" (Harmadik Út).
Program
The common program of the electoral alliance from the Campaign Diary came out in 2006.
[1]
The unfair EU accession treaty needs to be reviewed. Hungary can not be a colony!
Hungarian land must be kept in Hungarian hands.
The work of a nurturing mother of her children has to be recognized as a full-time profession.
The party initiates
family tax benefits and a total tax exemption for families with three or more children.
The
Christian churches are needed in the educating and teaching activities for children and the whole society in culture, education and the media.
The survival of the
Hungarian culture depends on the preservation of the
Hungarian language .
Giving dual citizenship to Hungarians living abroad and support their autonomy pursuits -
Székely autonomy initiatives (
Szeklerland ,
Romania ), Autonomy of
Vojvodina (
Serbia ), Autonomy in the southern part of
Felvidék (
Slovakia ) and Autonomy of
Carpathian Ruthenia (
Ukraine ).
Remembering on the memory of the
tragedy of Trianon and on the
Hungarian Revolution of 1956 .
Punishment have to be tightened in all areas.
Restoration of death penalty.
Revision of earlier privatizations, and invalidation of corrupt asset acquisitions.
Property taxes for billionaires.
Abolishment of tax incentives of multinational corporations, and obligation of banks to proportionate public burden sharing.
Support of Hungarian entrepreneurs and producers.
Stopping the massive settling of strangers into the country.
Reducing the retirement age to 55 years for women and to 60 years for men.
Reinforcing the defence and setting up a high-ranking, armed National Guard to protect the inner order and against external attacks.
Results
At the
2006 legislative election , April 9 and 23, the party won 2.2% of the popular vote and no seats. The alliance broke up shortly thereafter.
Election
Votes
Seats
Rank
Government
Leader of the national list
#
%
±
pp
#
+/−
2006
119,007
2.20%
–
±0
5th
extra-parliamentary
–
References
Sources
Vida, István (2011). Magyarországi politikai pártok lexikona (1846–2010) [Encyclopedia of the Political Parties in Hungary (1846–2010)] (in Hungarian). Gondolat Kiadó.
ISBN
978-963-693-276-3 .
External links
Far-right and radical nationalist politics in post-WWII Hungary
Political parties and groups People Related articles