Gulf Times

Can Donald Tusk go home again?

- By Slawomir Sierakowsk­i Slawomir Sierakowsk­i, founder of the Krytyka Polityczna movement, is Director of the Institute for Advanced Study in Warsaw and a fellow at the Robert Bosch Academy in Berlin.

Donald Tusk’s term as president of the European Council will end on November 30, which is perfect timing for the Polish opposition. After the parliament­ary election in late October, Poland will hold its presidenti­al election in April 2020, and opposition voters already see Tusk as the only viable candidate.

For the past year, Tusk has been dropping hints that he intends to return to Polish politics. “No one expects that after the conclusion of my term I will just be watching politics on television,” he recently said. Tusk is openly critical of the policies of Poland’s ruling party, Law and Justice (PiS), and has heaped praise on the recently created European Coalition, an opposition grouping comprising his own party, Civic Platform (PO); the Polish People’s Party (PSL); the Democratic Left Alliance (SLD); and others.

With the European Parliament election this month, Tusk has an early opportunit­y to start building a campaign profile. In his current role, he has become one of the faces of the European Union, which enjoys 88% support in Poland. His return to Polish domestic politics thus would bolster the opposition and set him up to leave his mark on Polish history.

If Tusk decides not to run, many Poles will be sorely disappoint­ed, and his standing in Poland will be diminished. But if he runs and loses to the incumbent, Andrzej Duda – who is essentiall­y a puppet of PiS

leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski – a long, successful political career will be severely damaged.

At an event last year commemorat­ing the centennial of Poland’s renewed independen­ce, Tusk depicted PiS as twenty-first-century Bolsheviks, and pointed out that Polish interwar leader Jozef Pilsudski and Solidarity cofounder Lech Wal sa each faced far more difficult circumstan­ces when they defeated their own eras’ Bolsheviks. Raised in the tradition of Polish romanticis­m, Tusk may come to see saving the nation as the logical culminatio­n of his political career.

Yet, despite Tusk’s advantages, he faces significan­t hurdles. Many Poles will never forgive him for raising the retirement age during his tenure as prime minister. In fact, that reform alone may be the reason why PO lost in 2015 to PiS, which lowered the retirement age immediatel­y upon taking office. And current polls suggest that only 34% of Poles support Tusk’s return to domestic politics, whereas 44% oppose it, and that he would lose to Duda.

In the past, Tusk has always managed to boost his poll numbers by speaking to ordinary voters over the course of a campaign. But one cannot win a Polish presidenti­al election on one’s own. For Tusk, mounting a successful campaign will require the backing of Grzegorz Schetyna of the European Coalition.

Like former British prime ministers Tony Blair and Gordon Brown with respect to Labour, Tusk and Schetyna were the PO’s key players when it was in power. Tusk was the party’s charismati­c public face, and Schetyna was the mastermind who kept the machine running. The two men complement­ed each other perfectly, but Schetyna always aspired to Tusk’s position, and was ultimately marginalis­ed. Still, while there is no love lost between them, they are both pragmatist­s.

The main criticism against Schetyna has always been his lack of charisma, which is thrown into sharper relief whenever Tusk’s star is rising. But Schetyna effectivel­y silenced his critics when he forged the European Coalition, the only political project with any shot of defeating PiS.

In Poland, true power rests with the prime minister, but the presidency carries prestige and a legislativ­e veto that can be overturned only by a threefifth­s majority in the Sejm. So, given Schetyna and Tusk’s complement­ary interests – namely, saving Polish democracy – it stands to reason that Schetyna should hold the premiershi­p and Tusk the presidency.

Though Tusk is more popular than Schetyna, it is Schetyna who holds all the cards. After Tusk decamped to Brussels, he neglected to maintain his domestic political relationsh­ips, which means that his former PO colleagues will not necessaril­y come running when he calls. They owe their loyalty to Schetyna, who controls the party’s organisati­on and money – and thus their own electoral prospects.

Obviously, this isn’t the arrangemen­t Tusk would prefer. Complicati­ng matters further, Schetyna is counting on Tusk to do his part in the European and Polish parliament­ary elections this year, but Tusk may see little reason to stick his neck out before the presidenti­al campaign really begins.

Recently, Tusk spoke at a University of Warsaw event commemorat­ing Poland’s 1791 constituti­on, where he made a show of erudition by citing Immanuel Kant, Edmund Burke, George Washington, and Ortega y Gasset. He warned of a civilisati­onal threat facing the world, and thereby pleased the elites in attendance. But in political terms, the speech was a mistake, as was a speech he gave the following week calling for national reconcilia­tion. For the opposition, all that matters right now is defeating the populist threat to democracy; reconcilia­tion is for later.

Tusk used to win elections in Poland because he was seen as a man of the people – a regular guy with whom you could imagine yourself playing soccer. Had he resumed his old style of politics and appeared with a Polish family from a small-town housing project, Tusk would have made a splash. Instead, he chose to wax eloquent from a bastion of European elitism, uttering words that ordinary Poles will greet with indifferen­ce, if not hostility. The opposition may not be able to defeat PiS without him, but if Tusk wants to go home again, he will first have to remember where he came from. – Project Syndicate

 ??  ?? Donald Tusk: “No one expects that after the conclusion of my term I will just be watching politics on television.”
Donald Tusk: “No one expects that after the conclusion of my term I will just be watching politics on television.”

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