The trunk of the car is opened. Inside, a tied and bound young man struggles theatrically.
Standing by the car is a woman. This is Alexandra Szentkiralyi, former government spokeswoman and now the best-known social media propagandist for Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban.
Speaking to the camera, she says, "I don't think you'd like this kind of thing to happen to you. Because with the fast EU accession of Ukraine come the organ dealers, the arms dealers, the drug dealers and the human traffickers."
The reel, which was posted on Facebook and TikTok, is just 10 seconds long. People in Hungary have been bombarded with content such as this for over two months now — not only on the Internet, but also on pro-government Hungarian television channels.

A steady stream of anti-Ukraine ads was broadcast on the radio, too, and in public spaces, billboards featured grim and sinister-looking images of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
Not just another campaign
This was not simply just another one of Orban's many hate campaigns; it was the first to target an entire country and declare it a "mafia state."
It was also the first Orban campaign to collectively dehumanize the citizens of a whole country and defame them as dangerous, merciless criminals who are allegedly out to destroy Hungary by trading in people, human organs, drugs and arms, by flooding the market with genetically modified foods, and by taking jobs, income, pensions and healthcare from Hungarian citizens.
Result cannot be verified
The objective of the consultation dubbed Voks 2025 (Vote 2025) was that Hungarians would voice their opposition to Ukraine joining the EU.
The vote ended on Saturday. On Thursday, Viktor Orban himself announced the result just before the EU summit in Brussels.
He said that 2.27 million Hungarians had taken part, which is about a third of the Hungarian electorate, and that 95% had voted against Ukraine joining the EU.
The prime minister said that he had come to Brussels "with a strong mandate," adding that "with the voice of over two million Hungarians" he could say that he does not support Ukrainian EU accession.
As with all previous campaigns orchestrated by Orban — such as the one against migrants or the one against George Soros, a US billionaire with Hungarian Jewish roots — it is not possible to verify whether this result is real or not.

The Hungarian government did not permit independent monitoring of the voting process or an independent public vote count.
In a similar survey, which was recently organized by Hungary's largest opposition party, Tisza (Respect and Freedom), 58% declared their support for Ukraine joining the bloc.
Letter to the people of Ukraine
Many responses in Hungary seem to indicate that a considerable proportion of the population see the campaign as excessive, false, dishonest or a diversionary tactic.
Some videos — including the car trunk video featuring Alexandra Szentkiralyi — have been used for hundreds of ironic or sarcastic memes on social media that attack the Orban system, its propaganda and the corruption scandals in which it is implicated.
Countless social media posts — including critical comments on Victor Orban's Facebook and TikTok channels — also show that many Hungarians find the prime minister's anti-Ukraine campaign morally reprehensible and dishonest.
Just a few days ago, a group of 50 well-known academics, artists, writers, former politicians and high-ranking civil servants — including former Foreign Minister Geza Jeszenszky and former head of the National Bank Peter Akos Bod — published a "letter to the people of Ukraine" in which they condemned Orban's propaganda and declared their solidarity with Ukraine.
Ukraine is an election issue
Despite such responses, it seems extremely unlikely that there will be a U-turn in the anti-Ukraine policy of Orban and his government.

It is also barely conceivable that Orban's power and propaganda apparatus would moderate its tone even a little or stop peddling certain narratives — such as its claim that the war crimes committed in Bucha were staged by the Ukrainian army.
The reason for this is that Ukraine has already become a major issue in the campaign for the parliamentary election that is due to take place in spring 2026.
Allegations about the opposition
The ruling majority has alleged that the opposition Tisza party, which is way ahead of Orban's Fidesz party in the polls, is funded by Ukraine and Brussels.
It also claims that Tisza's goal is to assume power in Hungary, sell out the country and plunge it into a war with Russia.
Government propaganda also regularly refers to Peter Magyar, the leader of Tisza, as "Ukraine Pete."
The Hungarian government also accuses another well-known Tisza politician, former Chief of the Hungarian Defense Forces Romulusz Ruszin-Szendi, of being a Ukrainian spy. It has not provided any evidence to back up this claim.
Pro-government media even claim that the Ukrainian salute "Slava Ukraini!" (Glory to Ukraine!) is being used as a Tisza party slogan.
Irreparable damage to relations
With this policy, Orban has unquestionably done irreparable damage to Hungarian–Ukrainian relations for as long as he remains in power.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and the Ukrainian government have thus far made either no comment on Orban's policy or only issued carefully worded, diplomatic statements. But this recently changed.
In his first interview with a Hungarian media outlet, the independent conservative portal Valasz Online, Zelenskyy in early June criticized Orban's use of Ukraine for his election campaign.
"He does not understand that this will have much more serious and dangerous consequences: the radicalization of Hungarian society and its anti-Ukrainian sentiment," said Zelenskyy, adding that by not helping Ukraine, Orban is doing Russian President Vladimir Putin a favor, which, said Zelenskyy, is a "serious, historic mistake."
The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry also issued its first explicitly critical statement on Tuesday. In it, the ministry referred to the "manipulative intention" behind the "Vote 2025" initiative, adding that during the campaign, which lasted several months, "Hungarian officials have been inventing non-existent threats allegedly coming from Ukraine in order to unjustifiably intimidate Hungarian citizens."
The goal of this "anti-Ukraine hysteria" was, it said, to divert attention away from the failures of the government’s socio-economic policy. However, the Ukrainian ministry said it was "confident that the overwhelming majority of Hungarian citizens are capable of recognizing this primitive manipulation."
This article was originally published in German.