Britain's vote to leave the European Union proves that Brussels must listen to the people and give proper answers to pivotal issues such as migration, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has said.
"Brussels must hear the voice of the people, this is the biggest lesson from this decision," PM Orbán said.
The prime minister said that British people were not satisfied with the policies that the EU took on the migration crisis.
Immigration was "a decisive and definitive issue" in the decision of U.K. voters to leave the European Union, he added.
"It was a decisive issue in the U.K.'s debate [over EU membership]. How they can keep their island, how they can remain who they are, how they can defend themselves against migrants and immigration, and whether they are satisfied with Brussels' policies on that matter and the defense [that Brussels] delivers," PM Orbán said.
The prime minister, who has clashed with Brussels many times over political and economic issues since he came into power in 2010, also said that Hungary is a member of the EU "because we believe in a strong Europe."
But the EU's answers to the issues of migration have failed to make it stronger, Prime Minister Orbán said.
Hungary will hold a referendum in the autumn on the EU's plan to relocate migrants to its member countries. The government opposes the EU's plan.