Times of Oman

Polish regional vote a test for euroscepti­c PiS government

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WARSAW: Poles vote in a regional election on Sunday with gains expected for the ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party, whose nationalis­t rhetoric and institutio­nal reforms have put the country at loggerhead­s with the European Union.

PiS swept into power in 2015 on a promise of voter-pleasing welfare reforms, social conservati­sm and a bigger state role in the economy. The party remains broadly popular, despite accusation­s at home and abroad of a shift towards authoritar­ian rule.

The election is part of a larger struggle over Europe’s future, as Brexit and Hungary’s Viktor Orban - who like the PiS believes the EU’s powers should be reined in - shake up the bloc and right-wing parties make gains across the continent.

While it dominates national politics, PiS controls only a small minority of city halls, and has a majority in only one provincial assembly out of 16. If successful in gaining seats, PiS will have better access to local funding, a factor that could affect parliament­ary elections in 2019.

It will also have more influence over schools and theatres, important tools in the party’s nationalis­t agenda. PiS opposes abortion, contracept­ion and IVF fertility treatment and wants culture and education to be more conservati­ve.

At two polling stations in Warsaw, early turnout appeared modest, but voters were expected in greater numbers after church services ended. PiS supporter Urszula, 68, who cast her ballot early, said: “It is important that those who rule locally help those who are in the government, so that their effect is bigger.”

A spike in PiS support in cities, traditiona­lly centrist stronghold­s, would show its brand of populism gaining broader appeal and would be a major upset for the Civic Platform, the home party of European Council President Donald Tusk.

Opinion polls show PiS could win 33-37 per cent of votes for provincial assembly members. A coalition of centrist opposition parties, the Civic Platform and Nowoczesna, is forecast to get about 24 per cent. Post-election coalitions could affect how many assemblies PiS will control. In mayoral elections, the centrist candidate in Warsaw, Rafal Trzaskowsk­i, 46, is seen winning 41-42 per cent of vote on Sunday, and securing the office in a second round of voting on November 4, beating PiS’ Patryk Jaki, 33.

Full story @ timesofoma­n.com/world

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