Magyar Accepted the Offer of the Outgoing Ministers, and the Government Will Also Transfer Their Severance Pay to the Children of Transcarpathia
10 Articles
10 Articles
The news that the outgoing Fidesz-KDNP ministers would donate their severance pay to support the institution was received with emotion and almost without words at the Reformed Children's Home in Nagydobrony. The Transcarpathian home currently cares for 170 orphans, disabled and disadvantaged children, and according to the director, the donation is a true miracle for them.
The new Hungarian Prime Minister Péter Magyar has called on former ministers and deputy ministers in Viktor Orbán's government to waive their severance pay. If they do not, they will not receive the money anyway, as its payment requires the signature of the new Prime Minister. However, by law, the severance pay must be paid, so both parties have agreed that the amount intended for the severance pay will go to charity.
“The chief inventory officer was not here,” said Prime Minister Péter Magyar at a press conference after the handover of ministerial duties. Apart from Viktor Orbán, all of his ministers were gone. According to Magyar, the ministers of the Orbán government handed over the information and files in different formats. “Some on paper, in several boxes, some on a pen drive, on the Innovation Ministry DVD – there was no more VHS.” Magyar said that Ger…
According to Péter Magyar, the atmosphere at the government handover was not good. Some ministries handed over their documents to the new government on paper, while others handed them over on DVD.
"This is a miracle. And we need miracles!" - told our newspaper the head of the Reformed children's home, which helps 170 orphans, disabled, or "just" difficult children live a life worthy of a human being and get a chance in Nagydobrony.
Hungary's new Prime Minister, Peter Magyar, emphasized that he was demanding that former ministers waive their severance pay, even though they were legally entitled to it. He threatened that if they didn't, he would, contrary to the law, not pay them the money they were owed. What's most brazen about this, however, is that Magyar stated this quite openly.
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