The new Hungarian Prime Minister Péter Magyar (45) continues to expose the conditions in which the previous government was in office. After taking the oath of the new ministers, he published a series of videos on social networks in which he showed the public the extremely luxurious premises of the Ministry of the Interior and the Government Office. He sharply contrasted the situation with the state of the Hungarian health system, he says.
“This is Sándor Pinter’s secret luxury ministry worth hundreds of millions. We are talking about the building of a minister under whose tenure our hospitals, child protection institutions and our teachers were humiliated.” Magyar said early Tuesday evening. PHOTO can be found in the gallery!
The Prime Minister took his followers on a virtual tour of the building of the former Royal Ministry of Finance near the Matthias Church, where the Department of the Interior was located until recently. Dávid Vitézy, the new Minister of Transport and Investments, accompanied him on the tour. “Everyone knows the tragic state of our hospitals and social facilities. Now look at the conditions in which the politicians who made decisions about them spent their days,” dodal Hungarian.
However, the revelations did not end there. After Wednesday’s tour of the Karmelity building (prime minister’s residence), Magyar and his team moved to the adjacent building – the Office of the Prime Minister, which was previously headed by Antal Rogán. Already at night, the prime minister published the first photos, and on Thursday morning a detailed one followed, more than .
The presentation began with an ironic reminder of an earlier conversation in which Rogán claimed: “Only man’s children can act gentlemanly, I’m unfortunately a boy from the village,” he says in the preview. The video then revealed stunning luxury: a restaurant with a glass roof, staircases with golden railings in the style of the Great Gatsby, or a roof terrace with a panoramic view of the parliament. Toilets with contactless batteries and cleanliness “like in a pharmacy” also attracted attention.
Perhaps the biggest surprise was the so-called “cigar room” reminiscent of Hollywood films, which is entered via a hidden touch switch. “Feel like you’re Antal Rogán. I suppose there used to be whiskey or some good rum,” commented the prime minister about the lounge.
Magyar pointed out that this the lavish renovation was completed in 2025, at the time of the deepest economic crisis and record inflation in Europe. He is struck by the idea that these spaces were created at a time “when there was no toilet paper or disinfection in hospitals.” He concluded the tour by recalling the words of János Lázár, who, according to Magyar’s colleagues, had already told the government in the past that “this luxury must be ended”.