Imperial Valley Press

Major setback for Poland’s ruling populists in mayoral races

- The local elections

WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Poland’s populist ruling party suffered a major setback in the country’s mayoral races, losing not only in all large cities but also in most mid-size and smaller cities. The results Monday dashed the ruling party’s ambitions for greater power nationally and showed the flaws of the party’s courtship of the far right.

In mayoral races in 649 cities, towns and smaller municipali­ties, official results released Monday showed that Po- land’s ruling right-wing Law and Justice party, in power since 2015, won no big city and only a handful of the smaller cities. The largest city captured by the conservati­ves was Zamosc, population 65,000.

Michal Szuldrzyns­ki, a leading editor with the Rzeczpospo­lita daily, said Law and Justice’s results in the mid-size cities — normally bastions of the political right — were “catastroph­ic” for the governing party. He argued in an opinion piece the results indicated that Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki and the ruling party have “failed to regain a moderate center and build up support among the middle class.”

Among the factors that have alienated many voters are Morawiecki’s “flirting with the most radical part of the electorate,” with gestures and words meant to appeal to far-right nationalis­ts, Szuldrzyns­ki argued.

He also listed disputes with the European Union over rule of law issues and a controvers­ial Holocaust speech law early this year that sparked a clash with Israel, which in his view was Poland’s most serious diplomatic crisis since communism fell in 1989.

Former Prime Minister Donald Tusk, now head of the European Council, said in Warsaw that he was “very surprised” by the scale of Law and Justice’s defeat in smaller cities. He said the result was a warning to the ruling party and a boost to the opposition Civic Platform party, which he used to lead.

In the first round of local voting on Oct. 21, an opposition coalition led by the centrist Civic Platform won outright in the capital, Warsaw, and in other key cities, including Wroclaw, Poznan and Lodz.

In runoff races Sunday, voters handed landslide victories to opposition politician­s in other prestigiou­s cities, including Krakow, Gdansk and Kielce.

While the opposition celebrated Monday, ruling party leaders sought to keep the focus on the party’s strong showing in Poland’s regional assemblies two weeks ago.

Law and Justice “won the local elections of 2018,” the deputy culture minister, Jaroslaw Sellin, told TVN24. “It won them like nobody has managed to do yet.”

The mayoral results, however, clearly reflected the strong opposition of urban Poles to Law and Justice, which has been accused of violating democratic standards with attempts to take control of the courts and turn public media into a party propaganda tool.

 ??  ?? A woman checks her ballot paper, during the second round of at a voting station in Lomianki, Poland, on Sunday. AP PhoTo/CzArek SokolowSkI
A woman checks her ballot paper, during the second round of at a voting station in Lomianki, Poland, on Sunday. AP PhoTo/CzArek SokolowSkI

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