Poland
goes to the polls in second round of close-fought presidential election
Win for
populist-right candidate Nawrocki will further political deadlock that has
hampered Tusk’s government
Jakub Krupa
in Warsaw
Sun 1 Jun
2025 06.00 BST
Polls have
opened in Poland for the second round of the presidential election, with the
two candidates offering radically different visions for the country locked in a
dead heat.
The race
pits the pro-European Warsaw mayor, Rafał Trzaskowski, backed by Donald Tusk’s
politically-diverse governing coalition, against the historian and former
amateur boxer Karol Nawrocki, endorsed by the populist-right Law and Justice
(PiS) party that governed the country between 2015 and 2023.
While the
role of the Polish president is largely ceremonial, it carries some influence
over foreign and defence policy and a critical power to veto new legislation.
This can only be overturned with a majority of three-fifths in parliament,
which the current government does not have.
At stake is
whether Tusk’s government will be able to make progress on its electoral
promises on the rule of law and social issues, including abortion and LGBTQ
rights, after 18 months of difficult cohabitation with the opposition
president, Andrzej Duda.
A Nawrocki
win would prolong the current deadlock, making it difficult for the government
to pass any major reforms before the 2027 parliamentary election.
“Tusk knows
the stakes and that if Nawrocki wins, he’s got a lame-duck administration for
the next couple of years. And it will be worse than with Duda as Nawrocki will
come in fresh, with a new mandate from what effectively turned into a
referendum on the government,” Prof Aleks Szczerbiak, who teaches east and
central European politics at the University of Sussex, said.
In the final
days of the campaign, both candidates sought to court voters of candidates
knocked out in the first round and mobilise their supporters, with analysts
stressing that less than 200,000 votes could decide the outcome of the race.
Polls showed
the difference between the two candidates to be within the margin of error,
making it the closest election in Poland’s post-1989 history.
“The outcome
is impossible to predict – there are too many moving parts, and even the
slightest change on the day could tip the balance,” Ben Stanley, an associate
professor at SWPS University in Warsaw, said.
On Friday
night, the country went into electoral silence, which forbids further
campaigning and new polls. This left voters with little more than 24 hours to
reflect on a brutal and polarising campaign.
Trzaskowski,
the Oxford-educated Warsaw mayor since 2018 who previously held ministerial
posts and served in the European parliament, sought to project himself as a
safe pair of hands to work with the government on implementing progressive
reforms.
However, his
campaign faced difficulties because of close links to the unpopular Tusk
government. He also had to defend himself against suggestions he is
out-of-touch and elitist, and against allegations about foreign funding for
online advertising promoting his candidacy.
In turn,
Nawrocki is new to politics. Since 2021, he has led the Institute of National
Remembrance, a state research institute with public prosecution powers
investigating historical crimes against Poland.
Formally an
independent but endorsed by PiS, he offers a new face to the party which is
burdened by the polarising legacy of its eight years in power. He received
public support from the US president, Donald Trump, and members of his
administration, as well as the Hungarian prime minister, Viktor Orbán.
But his
campaign was beset with allegations of impropriety related to his past,
including questions over his acquisition of an apartment from an older man and
his admission that he took part in an organised fight between 140 football
hooligans in his youth.
A win for
Nawrocki could also alter Poland’s supportive position toward Ukraine. He
repeatedly spoke about the difficult history between the two nations and
declared his opposition to Ukrainian membership in Nato.
The polls
will close at 9pm local time (8pm BST), with exit polls to follow. However, the
race is expected to be too close to call, with the focus shifting to late polls
and official results dripping in overnight.
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