[2] Szeged militants promoted Hungarian nationalism, an economic "third way", and advocated a "strong" state.
[1] Szegedists promoted irredentist claims to territories belonging to Hungary prior to the end of World War I.
[3] Gömbös declared violence to be "an acceptable means of statecraft... to shape the course of history, not in the interest of a narrow clique, but of an entire nation".
[3] Upon being appointed Prime Minister, Gömbös adopted fascist positions, including the promotion of corporatist solutions to national unity like that of Benito Mussolini and a racial policy like that of Adolf Hitler.
[3] Gömbös declared that his government would "secure our national civilization based upon our own special racial peculiarities and upon Christian moral principles".