Viktor Orbán sided with Dávid Németh after the senior analyst at K&H Bank spoke in a background discussion on Monday about the market's preference for the Tisza Party.
Orbán wrote that “a leading analyst from a major Belgian bank has also joined the anti-government chorus. Hungary has long been a target of the international banking world. Their problem is that we have included them in the public burden with the bank tax. That is why they are plowing away at every step.”

According to the Prime Minister, banks expect the next government to reduce economic subsidies, remove the 13th month pension and forget about the 14th month, eliminate tax exemptions for mothers with three and two children, reduce sports and cultural subsidies, and implement the 3 percent loan program.
"They are crying back to the world before 2010. It has been clear since yesterday: the international banking world has lined up behind the Tisza. They say this:"It's a bag of shit."
This is the second case in recent days where government members have accused a foreign company of interfering in domestic politics. According to Minister of Construction and Transport János Lázár, the Austrian construction company Strabag has joined the campaign on the Tisza side.

