Poland
faces years of political deadlock under new president
Poland’s
new nationalist president and liberal PM Donald Tusk will clash over domestic
reforms, but can find common ground in strengthening the military.
Karol
Nawrocki Election Rally In Katowice, Poland
June's
narrow electoral victory by Karol Nawrocki — a nationalist openly allied with
Donald Trump — delivered a massive body blow to the political prospects of the
ruling coalition led by pro-EU centrist Donald Tusk. |
https://www.politico.eu/article/poland-president-karol-nawrocki-donald-tusk-defense-policy/
August 5,
2025 4:01 am CET
By
Wojciech Kość
WARSAW —
Karol Nawrocki is being sworn in Wednesday for a five-year term as Poland’s
president, but it’s not going to be a happy day for Polish Prime Minister
Donald Tusk.
June’s
narrow electoral victory by Nawrocki — a nationalist openly allied with U.S.
President Donald Trump — delivered a massive body blow to the political
prospects of the ruling coalition led by pro-EU centrist Tusk.
That
threatens to stall the legislative agenda of the EU’s fifth-largest country and
to slow a push to restore rule of law that led to a breakdown of relations
between Warsaw and Brussels.
But there
are efforts to find common cause between Nawrocki and the centrists in areas
like defense — where everyone can agree Russia is the enemy.
“The
right-wing opposition candidate’s presidential election victory has radically
changed Poland’s political dynamics, scuppering the liberal-centrist coalition
government’s plans to reset its reform agenda,” wrote Aleks Szczerbiak, a
professor at the University of Sussex who studies Polish politics.
Nawrocki
succeeds Andrzej Duda, also supported by the nationalist Law and Justice (PiS)
party, and who has slow-walked Tusk’s agenda. Nawrocki promises to be even more
aggressive in hopes of painting the government as being ineffective and paving
the way for PiS to return to power in 2027, the next general election.
Ben
Stanley, a political scientist at the SWPS University in Warsaw, predicted that
Poland faces a two-year tug-of-war between Nawrocki and Tusk.
Dark
clouds
Everything
looks set for a stormy showdown.
A recent
reshuffle of the Cabinet elevated anti-PiS hawks to government positions,
signaling Tusk’s willingness to take on Nawrocki. The new Justice Minister
Waldemar Żurek, a former judge persecuted by PiS for his opposition to
judiciary reforms, has already started driving out judges promoted by PiS.
“It’s
just a warm-up,” Tusk quipped on social media, reacting to the outrage coming
from the PiS camp.
Nawrocki
has called Tusk, “the worst prime minister since 1989,” referring to the year
when Communism fell.
One key
area that is likely to see clashes is Tusk’s continuing effort to roll back
changes to the judicial system imposed by the previous PiS government that led
to Brussels freezing billions in EU funds over concerns about backsliding on
rule of law.
Tusk got
the money back on promises to restore democratic norms. He has, however, made
little progress in returning judicial independence and removing judges accused
of being improperly nominated, thanks to the slowness of his government and
resistance from Duda. Nawrocki will likely continue to block such changes.
“The
government will find it extremely difficult to unravel its Law and Justice
predecessor’s judicial reforms,” wrote Szczerbiak.
There are
already warnings from Brussels.
“It’s
important for the institutions to continue to follow up on the reforms for
veritable separation of power,” said Ana Catarina Mendes, the vice chair of the
Socialists and Democrats in the European Parliament who led on a report last
year on rule of law in Poland.
Nawrocki,
who is able to propose legislation as president, has promised to push through
popular measures like doubling the amount of tax-free income for individuals —
an idea abandoned by the Tusk government over deficit worries.
“Nawrocki
will definitely want to put the government in a difficult position by
presenting proposals aligned with the government’s earlier promises or policy
goals, which the government has failed to deliver,” Stanley said.
Nawrocki
has pledged to tour Poland to promote his tax ideas, such as no tax for
families with two or more children, lowering the VAT rate and other tax cuts
that would sap the budget of tens of billions.
Tusk has
already fired back, saying last week: “I will not allow Mr Nawrocki, once he’s
sworn in as president, to politically sabotage the government.”
Nawrocki
has also promised to veto any laws that “change the shape of national identity,
or surrender Poland’s sovereignty to authorities outside the Republic” — a jab
at the EU, immigration policy and at issues like changing abortion laws and
giving more rights to LGBTQ+ people.
Tusk
said: “I know the constitution by heart, especially the parts that spell out
the responsibilities of the president and of the government: the president is
the representative of the Polish state. The government conducts domestic and
foreign policy.”
Looking
for common ground
But the
two men do recognize that they will have to work together.
In their
first meeting after the election, Tusk brought up the issue of national defense
and continued military support for Ukraine — issues that straddle Poland’s deep
political divide.
“I
will seek to make security a unifying issue for all Poles,” Karol Nawrocki told
Defence24, a news website, in June. |
“We both
realize that it is in the best interest of everyone in Poland that state
institutions, whether they like each other or not, must cooperate on key
issues,” Tusk said in June.
Nawrocki
has also said that Poles “expect the president and prime minister to talk and
cooperate on issues that are important to our national community.”
“I will
seek to make security a unifying issue for all Poles,” Nawrocki told Defence24,
a news website, in June.
The new
president said he would like to forge an agreement between his office, the
government, and the parliament to “define defense funding levels, the main
directions for developing Poland’s security and defense system, as well as
related capabilities and legal regulations.”
But those
words don’t disguise the coming clash.
Tusk’s
increasingly inchoate coalition is likely to ramp up its work on stalled
legislation ranging from easing access to abortion through undoing PiS’s legacy
in the judiciary, to holding PiS’s top brass to account for alleged crimes.
The idea
would be to show that progress is being blocked by the new president.
The
government may decide “that it has no choice but to go for a full-frontal
confrontation with Mr Nawrocki hoping that he will over-reach so that it can
blame its shortcomings on presidential obstruction,” said Szczerbiak.
That will
leave voters in 2027 with a conundrum — back Tusk’s coalition and continue the
confrontation at least until the end of Nawrocki’s first term in 2030 or allow
for unified right-wing government and president.
“The next
election essentially will hinge around the question of whether it’s better to
have a government with a president that can facilitate it, or whether it’s
better to ensure that we don’t have a return to 2015-2023, where both sides of
the executive were essentially complicit in democratic backsliding,” said
Stanley, referring to PiS’s previous term in power.
That
means one of the EU’s fastest-growing economies, a close friend of the United
States with the highest percentage levels of defense spending in NATO and a
crucial ally in helping keep Ukraine in the fight against Russia, faces years
of drift.
Max
Griera contributed reporting from Brussels.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário