Solution Movement | |
Native Name: | Megoldás Mozgalom |
Colorcode: |
|
Abbreviation: | MEMO |
Leader1 Title: | President |
Leader1 Name: | György Gattyán |
Leader2 Title: | Vice presidents |
Leader2 Name: | Krisztina Bajusz Gábor Borsányi Viktor Huszár |
Leader3 Title: | Program board chairman |
Leader3 Name: | Péter Szatmári |
Founder: | György Gattyán |
Ideology: | Digitalization Pro-Europeanism[1] |
Position: | Big tent |
Colours: | Red White |
Slogan: | «Trusting in each other» |
Seats1 Title: | National Assembly |
Seats2 Title: | European Parliament |
Seats3 Title: | County Assemblies |
Seats4 Title: | General Assembly of Budapest |
Website: | memo.hu |
Country: | Hungary |
The Solution Movement (Hungarian: Megoldás Mozgalom; MEMO) is a political party founded in 2021 led by entrepreneur György Gattyán. The party was formed for the 2022 Hungarian parliamentary election, in which it did not win any seats.
György Gattyán's first public appearance since 2013 was in 2021 in an interview with Gabriella Jakupcsek, in which he testified about his political ambitions.[2] After that, he hinted in Sándor Friderikusz' podcast that he was starting a party.[3] He officially announced on 17 December 2021 in ATV that he is creating a party called Megoldás Mozgalom with which he intends to run in the 2022 elections and that he is nominating candidates in all 106 electoral districts.[4]
The party was registered on December 24, 2021, candidates were searched for in job advertisements.[5] [6]
The Megoldás Mozgalom program was initially not open to the public, the program points were uploaded in the form of small cards to their website and various social media platforms.[7] These include, among other things, the introduction of the concept of an economic public actor, the maximization of the tenure of the position of prime minister and the transformation of the TAO corporate tax system.
Their program, which was later made public, treated as a top priority the creation of a "guarantee system" for Hungary to move into the 21st century, by creating and operating a state-of-the-art economic, social and welfare framework.
In public life, the establishment of the Solution Movement provoked sharp debates.
After the announcement of the founding of the party, the opposition political alliance United for Hungary immediately accused the Gattyáns of electoral collusion with Fidesz, stating that if the party's goal had really been a change of government, it should have fielded its candidates in the 2021 opposition primary.[8] The opposition has also criticized that Gattyán's party is actually a sham party whose aim is to confuse opposition voters and divide their votes, thereby helping Fidesz-KDNP in the election.[9] [10]
Complicity with the governing parties was also believed to be seen in the fact that in March 2020, the Central Investigative Department of the National Crime Directorate of the National Investigation Agency (NAV) seized the building owned by Gattyán at Andrássy út for a value of HUF 14 billion 187 million. The seizure was lifted on December 7, 2021 by the NAV, and this happened immediately after Gattyán announced his political involvement. The parties of the opposition coalition also saw their accusations confirmed in the NAV decision favorable to Gattyán.[11]
In his interviews, the party chairman repeatedly denied that he had a relationship with the governing parties.[12]
The prominent role played by its leader, György Gattyán, in the international sex industry was a recurring criticism of the movement. Gattyán was listed as the 6th richest person in Hungary on the Forbes Hungary list published in 2022, his fortune estimated at HUF 253.8 billion was largely derived from the income of his erotic sex cam service called LiveJasmin.[13] [14] [15]
The founder of the party did not expect a simple, but a qualitative, two-thirds victory in the parliamentary elections.[18] Compared to this, MEMO's success in the national voting was finally achieved by obtaining 58,929 votes and a result of over 1 percent (1.04 %).[19] With this, Gattyán achieved that his party did not have to repay the money received for their campaign to the state.[20] In addition until 2026, they became entitled to 50-60 million forints per year in party funding.[21]