In Hungary, the final counts have been completed for the government "referendum" regarding support for Ukraine's aspirations to join the European Union, revealing that 95% of voters opposed it.
According to Orbán's government, a total of 2 million 278 thousand citizens participated in the survey, where 95% expressed their opposition to Ukraine's EU integration, while only 5% were in favor.
This number of participants represents approximately 29% of the total Hungarian electorate registered for last year's European Parliament elections (7.8 million people).
Telex points out that the voting results raise reasonable doubts, as practical checks indicated that an individual could vote twice using different email addresses.
During a recent briefing, government spokesman Gergely Gulyás stated that printed ballots undergo notarization, making them "impossible to falsify," and electronic votes are also being verified. However, he was unable to confirm whether the system could detect those who voted first with a paper ballot and then electronically. He mentioned that online votes constitute only about 10% of the total.