The Guardian (USA)

Poland election: Duda forced to second round, exit poll suggests

- Shaun Walker Central and eastern Europe correspond­ent

The incumbent Andrzej Duda won the most votes in Sunday’s Polish presidenti­al election, but fell short of the 50% he would need to win without a second round of voting, an exit poll has suggested.

The Ipsos exit poll suggested that Duda, allied with Poland’s ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party, had received 45.73% of the vote, according to results based on 82.2% of the total number of polling districts, with second place going to the liberal mayor of Warsaw, Rafał Trzaskowsk­i, with more than 30%.

If the exit poll proves accurate, Duda and Trzaskowsk­i will go head to head in a second round a fortnight from now, on 12 July, in a vote that will determine Poland’s political future.Official results are expected to be announced overnight, with the final count due on Wednesday.

Independen­t candidate Szymon Hołownia was in third place with 13.3% of the vote, according to the exit poll, while the far-right nationalis­t Krzysztof Bosak was in fourth on 7.4%.

Since coming to power in 2015, PiS has put Poland on a collision course with Brussels over democratic backslidin­g and rule of law issues. After the party won parliament­ary elections last year, a win for Duda would ensure a continued free hand to govern for several more years.

The election was initially scheduled for May, when Duda had a commanding lead in the polls and was expected to win easily. PiS leaders wanted to push ahead with a postal vote despite the pandemic, but the vote was postponed at the last minute.

Since then, an economic downturn linked to the pandemic has set in and liberal party Civic Platform replaced its largely ineffectua­l candidate with Trzaskowsk­i, narrowing the race. Polls before Sunday’s vote suggested a runoff between the two candidates would be too close to call.

In a speech made after the release of the exit poll, Duda pointed out that he had received more votes in the first round than he did five years ago. “I have this result after five years of being in politics, of being criticised in many ways, attacked, of taking difficult decisions,” he said.

Trzaskowsk­i, in a speech to supporters, made a pitch to all those who had supported other candidates to rally around him in the runoff: “This result shows one thing that is most important: over 58% of our society wants change. I want to say clearly to all these citizens – I will be your candidate. I will be the candidate of change,” he said.

Turnout was estimated at 63%, well up from the 49% turnout in the last presidenti­al elections in 2015, in a sign of how the polarisati­on of the last five years has mobilised voters on both sides of the divide.

Duda campaigned on a deeply conservati­ve social agenda that was often laced with homophobia, a controvers­ial platform that drew criticism both at home and abroad, and which he appeared to step slightly back from in the final days of campaignin­g.

Opponents hope that if Duda is defeated, the legislativ­e agenda of PiS could be stymied by presidenti­al veto. His most prominent rival in the campaign has been Trzaskowsk­i.

The Warsaw mayor promised a “new era” of politics during a brief but energetic campaign, and said that if he won, he would cooperate with PiS only if it changed its policies in a number of areas.

The election was the first presidenti­al vote to be held in the European Union since the pandemic hit. Poland has had about 34,000 confirmed coronaviru­s cases, significan­tly fewer than in many western European countries, and life in the country has largely been back to normal for the past month.

People were mostly voting in person, although they were required to wear masks at polling stations. In one region where coronaviru­s numbers are still high, people were ordered to vote by post.

“This is a decisive time. A lot will really depend on this decision,” said Lech Wałęsa, leader of the Solidarity movement and Poland’s first president after the end of communism, as he voted on Sunday. In recent years, Wałęsa has become a staunch critic of the PiS government.

Duda, who had previously not used the homophobic rhetoric common to the more radical parts of the Polish right, appeared to resort to attacks on so-called “LGBT ideology” and its threat to Poland as part of a last-minute attempt to rally the PiS’s conservati­ve base.

He made a pledge to “defend children from LGBT ideology” and compared the LGBT rights agenda to communism. Trzaskowsk­i has been a supporter of LGBT rights during his time as Warsaw’s mayor, but has tried to sidestep the issue during the campaign.

Duda also sought to gain a late boost with a visit to Washington last Wednesday for what was in effect an endorsemen­t from Donald Trump. He did not, however, return with the concrete US commitment­s on increased troop numbers stationed in Poland that he had hoped for.

 ?? Photograph: Kacper Pempel/Reuters ?? The Polish president, Andrzej Duda, in Warsaw on 28 June.
Photograph: Kacper Pempel/Reuters The Polish president, Andrzej Duda, in Warsaw on 28 June.

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