The Guardian (USA)

Donald Tusk sets out vision of a progressiv­e Poland at heart of EU

- Katarzyna Piasecka in Warsaw and Shaun Walker

Donald Tusk has presented his vision of a new, progressiv­e Poland at the heart of the EU, as his government won a vote of confidence in parliament on Tuesday.

“Poland will regain its position as a leader in the European Union,” Tusk told the Sejm, the lower house of parliament, during a speech on Tuesday. He promised to “bring back billions of euros” of EU funds to Poland, which were frozen due to a dispute between Brussels and the outgoing Law and Justice (PiS) government over rule-of-law concerns.

Soon after he spoke, however, the proceeding­s were plunged into chaos when a far-right MP used a fire extinguish­er to put out Hanukkah candles in the parliament, leading the speaker to exclude him from the sitting. Condemning Grzegorz Braun of the farright Confederat­ion party, Tusk said the incident was “unacceptab­le” and “a disgrace”.

MPs later voted to back Tusk’s candidacy by 248 to 201, after a broad coalition of opposition parties won a majority in October’s parliament­ary election. He will be confirmed as prime minister on Wednesday morning by the president, Andrzej Duda, in time for him to travel to a summit of EU leaders on Thursday and Friday.

The PiS government, in office since 2015, has had a two-month swansong after the vote, prolonged by delaying tactics from the PiS-allied Duda. Although PiS was the largest single party, all others ruled out working with it, meaning it had no route to a majority.

Tusk, a former European Council president, began his speech with a scathing condemnati­on of the legacy of the PiS years, recalling a furious political tract written by Piotr Szczęsny, a 54year-old chemist who doused himself in petrol in Warsaw in 2017 and died in hospital 10 days later from the injuries caused by his self-immolation.

Tusk said the “manifesto” Szczęsny wrote before his death, criticisin­g the creeping authoritar­ianism of the PiS government, could replace his speech, and read out a fragment: “I protest against the xenophobia introduced by the authoritie­s into public debate … I protest against the hostile attitude of the authoritie­s towards immigrants … I protest against the incapacita­tion of public television.”

His speech was regularly interrupte­d by shouts from PiS MPs. Mariusz Błaszczak, a PiS MP and former defence minister, called Tusk’s speech a “festival of lies”.

After condemning the outgoing government, Tusk outlined his own programme for Poland. “The time has come for Poland to be happy,” he said.

In campaign appearance­s, Tusk promised to introduce more rights for LGBTQ+ people, and roll back restrictiv­e abortion legislatio­n introduced under PiS. It remains unclear how much the new government will be able to change abortion laws, given elements of its own coalition do not back significan­t liberalisa­tion. Duda, who has veto power over the government, remains in office until 2025.

However, Tusk said on Tuesday that a different climate for Polish women would be felt immediatel­y. “We have developed a programme so that every Polish woman feels a change in the treatment of motherhood, protection of mothers and access to legal abortion,” he said.

“From the very first days, we will take concrete actions to ensure that women feel an immediate improvemen­t in terms of their rights. All women will experience an improvemen­t in their lives.”

Tusk announced the formation of a number of new ministeria­l positions including for equality, for senior citizens and for civil society.

He also suggested his government would seek to ameliorate the situation on Poland’s border with Belarus, where Polish border guards have frequently used violence to push back asylum seekers. Belarusian authoritie­s have orchestrat­ed and exacerbate­d the crisis but rights groups accuse Polish border guards of using unnecessar­y force and subjecting people to humiliatin­g treatment.

“You can protect the Polish border and be humane at the same time,” said Tusk.

Tusk, now 66, was prime minister between 2007 and 2014, before leaving for Brussels to become president of the European Council. He returned to Polish politics to lead a campaign against PiS in the election, portraying the vote as the last chance to save democracy in Poland.

The change of government has breathed life into the progressiv­e sector of Polish society. At the end of Tusk’s speech, the new parliament speaker, Szymon Hołownia, thanked the 4 million Poles who watched Monday’s parliament­ary session on YouTube.

Also on Tuesday, the European court of human rights ruled Poland had violated the right to respect for a private life by not allowing legal recognitio­n for same-sex couples, putting pressure on the new government to change the law quickly.

“The court considered that the Polish state had failed to comply with its duty to ensure that the applicants had a specific legal framework providing for the recognitio­n and protection of their same-sex unions,” it said in a statement.

One point on which Tusk is unlikely to depart from the position of the previous government is over support for Ukraine. Poland has been one of the staunchest supporters of Ukraine since the full-scale invasion last year, although a disagreeme­nt over concession­s for Ukrainian truckers has recently escalated into a serious dispute.

Tusk said he would take the economic interests of Polish farmers and truckers, worried about competitio­n from Ukraine, into account. But he also said it was important to remember how much was at stake in Ukraine and back Kyiv to defeat Russia.

“We will loudly and decisively demand the full mobilisati­on of the free world to help Ukraine in this war ... I can no longer listen to politician­s who talk about being tired of the situation in Ukraine. They tell President Zelenskiy that they are tired of the situation. I will demand help for Ukraine from day one,” he said

 ?? ?? Donald Tusk began his speech with a scathing condemnati­on of the legacy of the PiS years. Photograph: Aleksandra Szmigiel/Reuters
Donald Tusk began his speech with a scathing condemnati­on of the legacy of the PiS years. Photograph: Aleksandra Szmigiel/Reuters

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