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PARLT BUDGET CTTEE MEETING LACKS QUORUM

 

Parliament’s budget committee meeting convened to discuss allowances for families raising children with severe disabilities and the residency bond scheme lacked quorum because the ruling party members stayed away.
Committee head László Varju, of the leftist opposition Democratic Coalition (DK), said that the allowances for families raising severely disabled children in their homes (GYOD) was on the agenda because the families have said they find the regulation discriminative. The Socialist Party’s Attila Mesterházy said that opposition MPs will submit a proposal to parliament obliging the government to adapt the subsidies to individual needs and situations. Regarding the residency bonds, Varju noted that the committee had kept the issue on the agenda for two years now, with those cited before the committee “not even willing to reply” to their invitation. Finance Minister Mihály Varga, Interior Minister Sándor Pintér, Attila Fülöp, the state secretary for social affairs, and others were invited to the meeting to speak about the number of those who received Hungarian citizenship with the help of residency bonds and the scheme’s economic effect, but none of them attended. Anett Bősz of the Liberal party said that the ruling parties’ MPs had stayed away because the issue of the residency bonds was “especially embarrassing” for the government. If this was not the case, the interior minister would publicly state that “nothing is wrong with the nearly 20,000 new Hungarian citizens” who have availed themselves of the scheme, she said. The programme, she insisted, has cost taxpayers 30 billion forints (EUR 94.1m).