Bangkok Post

Zero turnout as country holds bizarre ghost election

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WARSAW: Poland’s election day yesterday was set to be one for the history books as polling stations remained closed and turnout will clock in at zero due to a political crisis set off by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The EU member of 38 million people has found itself in the bizarre “Twilight Zone” predicamen­t in which the presidenti­al ballot is formally neither postponed nor cancelled, because the government and opposition were unable to agree on a constituti­onal and safe solution.

“We’re in a fog of legal absurdity,” Warsaw-based political scientist Stanislaw Mocek said, echoing the widespread head-scratching and concern.

The government “should have declared a natural disaster to lawfully postpone the election” under the constituti­on.

The right-wing Law and Justice (PiS) party has explained away its refusal to do so by saying Poland’s coronaviru­s situation is not severe enough to warrant the move.

The party has also implied that were it to declare a natural disaster, multinatio­nal corporatio­ns present in Poland would claim huge sums in compensati­on that the state would be hardpresse­d to pay.

But the liberal opposition and many observers also see another rationale for why the government was set on the May 10 date, despite three out of four Poles wanting a deferral.

The opposition, which has long called for a delay over concerns that a free, fair and safe election is impossible under lockdown, believes the PiS wants the ballot held as soon as possible so that its ally and incumbent Andrzej Duda wins.

The president is the current frontrunne­r and could secure a second term in the first round with 50% of the vote, but his support would likely drop once the effects of the pandemic are felt.

Last month, the PiS-controlled parliament passed a law stating the election would be held by postal vote only in a bid to quiet health concerns while maintainin­g the date.

But the opposition-controlled senate sat on the legislatio­n for weeks before rejecting it, leaving the government no time to organise the election.

On Wednesday, the PiS and its allied Agreement party announced that the poll would be declared null and void after the fact.

“After the May 10, 2020 date passes and the Supreme Court annuls the election as expected in light of the fact that the vote will not have taken place, the speaker of parliament will announce a new presidenti­al election for the first available date,” they said in a statement.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Protesters wear protective masks and wave Polish national flags on Thursday during a march to protest the presidenti­al election in Wroclaw, Poland.
BLOOMBERG Protesters wear protective masks and wave Polish national flags on Thursday during a march to protest the presidenti­al election in Wroclaw, Poland.

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