The New Observer
April 23, 2016
A high-powered delegation from the Swiss parliament’s Social Security and Health Committees (SSHC)—which oversees immigration policies—is currently conducting a two-day tour of the border fence system at the famous border town of Asotthalom, Hungary.
The delegation—which includes a number of senior Swiss People’s Party (Schweizerische Volkspartei, SVP) Members of Parliament, congratulated the town’s mayor, László Toroczkai, on his tough stance against the fake refugee invasion.
The Swiss delegation in Mayor Toroczkai’s office.
Mayor Toroczkai said in a post on his official Facebook page that the SVP-dominated delegation was spending two days investigating the invasion situation in the town.
Referring to his famous videos warning the nonwhite invaders to stay away from Hungary, Mayor Toroczkai said that the Swiss delegation specifically mentioned his videos during the discussions held at his offices.
“They told me that they had watched with interest from the very first moment my effort to defend the borders, and that they wished to thank me in person for my efforts,” he wrote.
“I was very honored, and they gave me a Swiss Army knife as gift,” he added with a “smiley” emoticon.
The importance of the delegation’s status is highly significant, because the SVP is the single largest party in Switzerland, and shares power in that country’s constitutionally-mandated coalition government.
Mayor Toroczkai ended his news update with the comment that “now is the time for Europe to finally wake up. Let’s hope it won’t be too late.”
As pointed out earlier, Mayor Toroczkai can quite rightly be credited with the building of Hungary’s border fence after his efforts to alert his country to the dangers posed by the Angela Merkel-inspired Third World invasion became so successful that the Hungarian government was forced to act.
Although Mayor Toroczkai is not a member of the Hungarian nationalist Jobbik party, he is closely aligned to them. The significance of the Swiss delegation coming to his town is therefore huge, and is an indication of the growing European resistance to the invasion—and of a distinct rightward shift even in Swiss politics.