Framing Analysis
Hungary elected Péter Magyar’s Tisza Party in April and established a Ministry for the Living Environment this month, placing environmental protection, nature conservation, and animal welfare at the top of the national agenda for the first time in 16 years [Euronews]. Diána Ürge-Vorsatz, a Hungarian physicist and CEU professor serving as IPCC vice-chair, has been cited in connection with these developments amid the third energy crisis in a decade [Euronews]. All claims originate from two left-center sources.