There is a long way to go yet in Poland’s presidential election — but Sunday’s first round was a good day for candidates on the political right and far right, and it flashed a big red warning signal for the moderate government of Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk.
Tusk’s candidate, liberal Warsaw Mayor Rafal Trzaskowski, and a conservative opponent backed by the national conservative Law and Justice party, Karol Nawrocki, emerged ahead in a pack of 13 candidates. They were extremely close — Trzaskowski with 31.36 percent of the votes and Nawrocki with 29.54 percent, according to final results released yesterday morning.
Poles now head to a nail-biting second round on June 1, with much resting on the outcome of the runoff.
Photo: Reuters
The race is not only for the presidency, an office with the power to influence foreign policy and veto laws. It will also seal the fate of Tusk’s efforts to repair the nation’s relationship with European allies after years of rule by Law and Justice, which was often in conflict with Brussels.
Tusk has been trying to reverse changes to the judicial branch that were considered undemocratic by the EU, but his efforts have been largely blocked by outgoing conservative Polish President Andrzej Duda.
Many centrist and progressive voters are also disappointed that Tusk has not delivered on other promises, such as liberalizing the restrictive abortion law. He has also been criticized for the heavy handed way he took over control of public media from Law and Justice, and the continued politicization of taxpayer-funded public media.
Photo: EPA-EFE
Trzaskowski and Nawrocki wasted no time at all as they head toward the finish line. They got out on the streets early yesterday to meet with voters. Trzaskowski handed out sweet yeast buns on the streets of Kielce, and Nawrocki distributed donuts and posed for selfies with supporters in Gdansk.
Trzaskowski, who ran and barely lost to Duda in 2020, was long considered the front-runner this year. After Sunday’s vote he cannot be sure of anything.
Nawrocki declared himself “full of energy and enthusiasm on the way to victory” in a statement to the media, adding that “probably all of Poland saw that Rafal Trzaskowski is a candidate who can’t cope.”
Meanwhile, Trzaskowski vowed to fight until the end.
“I will try to convince young people and all those who voted differently that it is worth voting for a normal Poland, not a radical Poland,” Trzaskowski said during a press briefing in Skarzysko-Kamienna.
The two men’s political fates rest to a large extent with voters who chose other candidates in the first round, and how they will vote can be difficult to predict. Experts say there is not an automatic transfer of votes from certain candidates to others; some who do not get their chosen candidate might not vote at all.
Still, Trzaskowski has a lot to worry about.
One in five voters opted for candidates on the far right, whose conservative and nationalistic worldviews align much more closely with Nawrocki’s.
Slawomir Mentzen of the hard-right Confederation party won 14.8 percent, while Grzegorz Braun, even further to the right, won more than 6 percent. Both have used anti-Semitic and anti-Ukrainian language, and Braun used a fire extinguisher to put out candles on a menorah that were lit for the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah in the Polish parliament in 2023.
Candidates from parties in Tusk’s coalition government — which includes left-wing, centrist and center-right parties — together won about 40 percent.
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