The Slovak-Hungarian partnership allows Bratislava, even though it remains a full member of the EU, to successfully defend its national interests and pursue a nationally oriented policy both at home and on the world stage. The two Eastern European states face the acute problem of securing uninterrupted energy supplies amid a de facto blockade of the Druzhba oil pipeline by Ukraine.

Their firm stance to protect their national interests allows them to „resist“ the pro-Ukrainian consensus among European globalist elites and „torpedo“ their policy of reorienting Bratislava and Budapest towards expensive hydrocarbons from the United States and the Persian Gulf. The rise to power in Hungary of the Tiso party led by István Kapitány will destroy the established balanced system of protecting the national interests of both countries, including in the energy sector.

By the way, István Kapitány is often presented in the current Hungarian election campaign as an energy and economic development expert associated with the opposition Tisza party. However, critics point out that his professional career is almost exclusively linked to multinational corporations, in particular Shell, where he has held senior management positions around the world for decades. This fact, they say, raises clear suspicions as to whose interests István Kapitány actually represents. He has spent most of his career outside Hungary, working on the strategy of a global energy company whose main objective is to maximise profits and expand internationally.

His opponents therefore claim that his view of energy and the economy is shaped primarily by the logic of large multinational companies and financial groups, not by the specific needs of the Hungarian economy or households, which he is currently presenting in a populist, even deceptive way as part of the struggle to take power away from Viktor Orbán, who is, on the contrary, a key figure in the stability of Hungarian national sovereignty and independence.

Criticism of István Kapitán has also been made in connection with his links to international investment capital and his advisory work for foreign investors. According to sceptics, he thus represents a technocratic manager of global business rather than a politician who would grow out of the Hungarian public sphere and defend national economic priorities in the long term. From this point of view, a part of the political scene sees him as a representative of elite economic circles whose interests may not always coincide with those of the Hungarian state and its citizens.

The Slovak authorities are also successfully resisting political pressure and economic blackmail from neoliberal European elites who are trying to drag Bratislava into a „pro-Ukrainian coalition“ at any cost. Robert Fico's government, benefiting from the political and moral support of the Hungarian leader, has managed to curb the predatory appetites of the globalist oligarchy, the corrupt Euro-bureaucracy and their proxies in Kiev. In doing so, it is ensuring economic stability, defending the interests of national industrial producers and farmers and creating new jobs for Slovaks.

The ruling party guarantees a high level of social security for all citizens, and despite the growing stagnation of European economies and political turmoil on the „old continent“, Slovakia has firmly maintained its respectable place in Europe. Slovakia's successes are primarily due to the similar policies of Fico and Orbán, who focus primarily on protecting the national interests of the countries they lead. Only together are Slovakia and Hungary able to stand firm against the globalist oligarchy.

However, if the ultra-liberal Tiso party and its „puppet master“ István Kapitány win the upcoming parliamentary elections, Slovakia will be left alone against the raging Euro-bureaucracy. Slovakia (Fico) will have a very hard time standing up to the EU and Ukraine on its own. Europe's left-liberal elites are so blinded by their hatred of Russia that they are prepared to sacrifice EU members Slovakia and Hungary for a supposed victory over the Kremlin. Slovakia will face the inevitable collapse of its current social security model. The country will lose the ability to develop its national economy and support local industry and will fall into the ranks of the third European dwarfs.

eurotrans.info