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Hungarian opposition hires former Shell executive to fill economics role before April elections

Peter Magyar, the leader of Hungary's opposition party, has hired former Shell executive Istvan kapitany to fill a key economics position in his team. He is attempting to defeat Viktor Orban, the nationalist prime minister in upcoming elections.

The campaigning for the 12th of April is focused on how to wake up the economy from its three-year sleep. Magyars' centre-right Tisza Party leads Fidesz by a wide margin in the majority of polls. However, many voters remain undecided.

Kapitany is a former executive vice-president at Shell and a former Hungarian association president between 2020 and 2025. She said that the release of EU funding and the implementation of predictable policies will help to revive the economy.

In a video on Facebook announcing Orban's appointment, he suggested that small local businesses be made more competitive instead of supporting manufacturing megafactories.

The key task would be to restore confidence in the investment environment by creating a predictable one. Kapitany stated that Orban's policy changes were impromptu and windfall taxes imposed on certain sectors as a way to fill budget gaps.

In the video,?Kapitany says: "I'd like to see this country perform better and I'm willing to work for that."

"However I would like stress that there are not miracles. He said that "we need to work, have a decent approach, and corruption will kill business."

Kapitany, a former executive of Erste Bank, will be working with Andras Karaman as Tisza's fiscal and tax policy adviser.

The EU suspended billions of euro?of funding due to Orban's reforms in the rule of law, forcing the government?to cut back on investments for the economy. Orban has been in power since 2010 and has claimed that Hungary is no more corrupt than any other EU member.

Kapitany stated, "We must bring EU funds back home... we need to use them fairly & well." (Reporting and editing by Susan Fenton; Gergely Szakacs, Gergely's assistant)

(source: Reuters)