The Jerusalem Post

Poland’s Tusk calls for quick decision on gov’t

- • By PAWEL FLORKIEWIC­Z and

WARSAW (Reuters) – Poland’s president should move swiftly to allow the formation of a new government, Donald Tusk, leader of the Civic Coalition (KO) Party, said on Tuesday, as official election results showed his liberal pro-EU party and its allies winning a majority.

A KO-led government would mark a massive shift in Poland after eight years of conflict between the ruling nationalis­t Law and Justice (PiS) Party and the European Union over the rule of law, media freedom, minority rights, and migration.

“I am making a passionate appeal to the president, people are waiting for the first decisions, so we are asking the president for energetic and quick decisions,” Tusk wrote on social media platform X.

Earlier, the Electoral Commission confirmed that PiS had lost its majority, though it remains the largest single party in the lower house of parliament. PiS won 35.38% of the vote, which translates into around 190 seats in the 460-seat chamber.

Tusk’s KO won 30.70% of the vote, the Center-Right Third Way took third place with 14.40% and the New Left had 8.61%, the Commission said. The far-right Confederat­ion won 7.16%.

KO, the Third Way and the New Left, combined, will have around 250 seats, the results suggested, enough for them to form a stable coalition.

“In the coming days, after the (final) results are announced, we will talk,” said Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz, a leader of Third Way, referring to the planned tripartite coalition negotiatio­ns.

However, forming such a government could take weeks, if not months. President Andrzej Duda, a PiS ally, said before the vote that he would give the first shot at forming a cabinet to the group or party that won most ballots.

With no party indicating a willingnes­s to join a PiS-led government, however, the nationalis­t party led by Jaroslaw Kaczynski seems unlikely to be able to secure a third term at the helm of the EU’s largest eastern member state.

In that event, Duda is expected to invite Tusk as leader of the second biggest party to attempt to form a government.

“Evil has prevailed in Poland, temporaril­y,” Marek Suski, a senior PiS official, told public broadcaste­r TVP. “PiS is likely moving into a really democratic opposition.”

MASS MOBILIZATI­ON

Turnout in Sunday’s election exceeded 74%, the highest in Poland since the collapse of communism in 1989, after the parties managed to galvanize large numbers of especially younger voters for the first time.

But the election campaign was marred by harsh, divisive rhetoric, reflecting deep polarizati­on within Polish society.

Vowing to protect Polish borders and sovereignt­y, PiS cast the vote as a fight against unfettered migration and against unwarrante­d interferen­ce in national life by remote, unelected EU bureaucrat­s.

Opposition leaders including Tusk, a former European Council president, said PiS would take Poland out of the EU if it won a third term – a charge denied by the ruling party despite its numerous legal and political feuds with Brussels.

Opposition parties have yet to name a candidate for the post of prime minister but Tusk, 66, is widely expected to be their nominee. He served as Polish premier from 2007 to 2014.

“Nobody doubts today that without Donald Tusk’s energy and determinat­ion, change in Poland would not have been possible,” Marcin Kierwinski, a senior KO official, told Polsat News broadcaste­r.

Still, the three parties are likely to face complex talks over issues such as abortion and LGBT rights.

On abortion, Kosiniak-Kamysz of Third Way said on Tuesday his party would support reversing a 2021 near-total ban on terminatio­ns by reinstatin­g the right to abortion in cases of fetal defects, but would not agree upfront to further liberaliza­tion.

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