Polish
presidential candidates neck and neck on eve of runoff vote
Polls show
close-run contest after first round in which one rural municipality was decided
by a single voter
Jakub Krupa
in Siekierczyn
Sat 31 May
2025 05.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/may/31/poland-close-presidential-election-runoff
Poles will
cast their votes on Sunday in the closest presidential runoff since the fall of
communism, in an election that pits two different visions of the nation against
each other.
In Poland’s
previous election in 2020, the conservative populist incumbent Andrzej Duda
narrowly won the second-round vote against the pro-Europe mayor of Warsaw,
Rafał Trzaskowski, by 51% to 49%.
This time it
could be even closer. Polls show the difference between Trzaskowski and the
nationalist rightwing historian Karol Nawrocki, who is backed by the Law and
Justice party (PiS), which ruled Poland from 2015 to 2023, to be within the
margin of error.
At stake is
whether the coalition government led by Donald Tusk, Trzaskowski’s political
patron, will be able to pursue its progressive agenda or see it further blocked
by a critical opposition president armed with the power to veto laws.
In
Siekierczyn, a rural municipality with 4,265 residents across eight villages in
the south-west of Poland, the first round was decided by a single vote,
catapulting the hitherto unknown area into the spotlight.
“You
probably often heard ‘my vote won’t change anything’. But look at Siekierczyn,”
the winner, Trzaskowski, said in a social media video, rallying voters before
the runoff.
Noticeboards
in the village are plastered with posters of candidates, and the mayor, Dariusz
Furdykoń, 48, cherishes the attention that comes with the close result. The
area faces challenges with rural revitalisation and energy transition, he says.
In 2023, he turned a neglected bathing pond into a colourful outdoor
playground; a new sports hall is to open this year.
But he
worries about depopulation as more people died (46) than were born (26) last
year, and younger people leave for cities or seek work in Germany or the Czech
Republic.
Emotions are
running high, he admits. “These differences come out at the dining table,
during first communion, Christmas or Easter. The rift is between older, often
less-educated people, and younger ones, who have been out and about,” he says.
“Some are
voters, others are believers. But what can you do? You need to talk with them,
try to find a way forward.”
In the first
round, about 60% of residents cast votes. “But the weather was awful,” Furdykoń
says. On Sunday, he hopes to see more come out; the municipality will even run
a special bus service to polling stations.
In the early
afternoon, the sleepy village turns into a hive of political campaigning as a
group of Nawrocki voters meet to chat to the conservative TV channel Republika.
Standing by
their pickup emblazoned with Nawrocki’s poster, Henryk, a former councillor,
and Janina Wójcik say they want “a candidate who, however lofty it sounds,
serves Poland’s interests best”.
They feel
that “someone wants to take our freedom, our statehood,” as they worry about
plans to create “a European army” and EU green policies. In contrast, the
Donald Trump-backed Nawrocki is a Catholic and will guarantee their state
pension payments and free prescriptions, they say.
Others rush
to point out that Trzaskowski only came first because of a polling station
inside a prison, where he won by 77 votes. “People in the village didn’t vote
for him; prisoners did. Not something to brag about, is it?” says Teresa
Zembik, 62.
Her husband,
Wojciech, 63, is head of the local PiS branch and he doesn’t mince words.
Political conflict “runs through families here”, he says. “These are not just
political views, it’s a continuation of the war, and Poland is at stake. One
group wants to fight for Poland, the other to destroy it in the interests of
Russia and Germany.”
As the group
crosses the road from the parish church, another man splits from it and tears
down a Trzaskowski banner on a nearby house.
Its resident
Monika misses the drama. When told about the incident by children, she pulls
her phone out. “I will get another one up,” she laughs.
She wants a
“tolerant, clean and peaceful Poland” and rejects the dismissive tone about
prison voters. “Folks make mistakes but then make amends. People are people.”
Her daughter got her dad to vote for the first time this year. Maybe that won
the first round, she wonders.
She is not
the only one to stake that claim. Picking up children from school, Mariola says
her son turned 18 recently and voted for the first time, so it’s his vote that
swung it for Trzaskowski. “I want to get reforms going,” she says, pointing to
women’s rights – “the right to choose” – in particular.
At a local
supermarket, two Nawrocki voters, Dominik and Janusz, joke about another
neighbour who also says he decided the vote. But they are tired of “dirty
campaign tricks” against their candidate.
They shrug
off that Nawrocki took part in an organised fight between 140 football
hooligans20 years ago (he called it an act of “noble combat”), and distrust
reports he was allegedly involved in procuring sex workers while working as a
student security guard at a hotel (a claim he strongly denies).
Instead,
they focus on the here and now, and want Nawrocki to lower national insurance
payments for entrepreneurs. As president he could propose legislation, but he
wouldn’t have a majority in parliament – at least for now.
The closest
presidential run-off since the fall of communism pits two different visions of
Poland against each other on the ballot paper. Photograph: Jakub Krupa/The
Guardian
Despite the
fevered atmosphere, there are still some voters who are yet to make up their
minds. Wioletta, 44, voted in the first round for the libertarian far-right
candidate Sławomir Mentzen, who came third, and she doesn’t like the remaining
candidates. “But I have to go. I’ll decide at the polling station,” she says.
Adam, 40,
says: “None of them convinced me yet.” He plans to watch YouTube and read up
over the weekend.
Aleks
Szczerbiak, a professor of politics at the University of Sussex, said it was
“very, very close,” with 5% yet to pick a side. It “might mean you get …
disillusioned government supporters coming out in spite of everything” for
Trzaskowski, or older voters who skipped the first round mobilise to back
Nawrocki, or see another minor movement that could ultimately decide the
result, he said.
The diaspora
vote could play a role, too, with about 700,000 registered voters abroad,
including 185,000 in the UK.
Ben Stanley,
an associate professor at SWPS University in Warsaw, said: “The outcome is
impossible to predict. There are too many moving parts, and even the slightest
change on the day could tip the balance.”
For what
it’s worth, it is expected to rain again in Siekierczyn on Sunday.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário