ON
← Back to feed
He could squander hundreds of millions while shouldering the enormous burden of changing the name of his castle county to Tisza.
HU🏛️ Politics11 hr. ago

He could squander hundreds of millions while shouldering the enormous burden of changing the name of his castle county to Tisza.

The article discusses a proposed change by the Hungarian government to rename the 19 largest territorial administrative units in Hungary from 'vármegye' to 'megyék'. This symbolic measure under Prime Minister Viktor Orbán's administration would require significant financial resources and substantial bureaucratic work. The plan involves updating road signs, stamps, and IT systems, potentially costing hundreds of millions, possibly billions of forints. It also mentions that approximately 1,200 laws might need revision to align with the new terminology.

1 reports

Magyar Nemzet logoMagyar NemzetParty-alignedCenter11 hr. ago
He could squander hundreds of millions while shouldering the enormous burden of changing the name of his castle county to Tisza.

The article discusses a proposed change by the Hungarian government to rename the 19 largest territorial administrative units in Hungary from 'vármegye' to 'megyék'. This symbolic measure under Prime Minister Viktor Orbán's administration would require significant financial resources and substantial bureaucratic work. The plan involves updating road signs, stamps, and IT systems, potentially costing hundreds of millions, possibly billions of forints. It also mentions that approximately 1,200 laws might need revision to align with the new terminology.

Bias read (Center): The article presents the proposal as a symbolic action by the ruling government without overtly criticizing or praising the initiative. It focuses on the logistical and financial implications rather than taking a clear ideological stance. The framing remains neutral, providing factual information on

Keep the news honest.

ObjectiveNews is reader-funded and ad-free — we show you the bias instead of hiding it. Support independent journalism for €5/month.

Become a Supporter

Related stories