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Polish presidential election: playoff between two right-wing
candidates
By Marius Heuser
14 October 2005
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Last weekends presidential elections in Poland saw the
continuation of the trend set during the parliamentary elections
held two weeks ago. Right-wing candidates were able to completely
dominate the election, while the majority of voters stayed away
from the ballot boxes. On October 23 a final ballot between the
two presidential candidates with the largest share of the vote
will take placeDonald Tusk from the extreme free-market
Citizens Platform (PO) and Lech Kaczynski from the conservative
law-and order-party Fairness and Justice (PiS).
The first round of the election saw Tusk, who was widely expected
to win comfortably, achieve 36.3 percent of the vote, just above
that of Kaczynski, who received 33.1 percent. The right-wing populist
Andrew Lepper from the Samoobrona (Self Defence) farmers party
received 15.5 percent and fourth-place Marek Borowski, the only
left-wing candidate, obtained 10.2 percent. All other
candidates received less than 2 percent of the vote. Voter turnout
was extremely low, at just 49.7 percent.
The fact that the two leading candidates both come from the
right-wing parties that will form the next coalition government
highlights the complete discrediting of the so-called left
in Poland. In October 2000, when the predecessor organisations
to the PiS and PO were in government, the current president, Aleksander
Kwasniewski from the Democratic Left Alliance (SLD), was able
to muster 53.9 percent of the votes in the first round of the
presidential election, with a voter turnout figure of 62 percent.
Five years later his favoured candidate Borowski was not even
able to manage one-fifth of this result.
Borowski belongs to the Polish Social Democracy (SPDL), which
split from the governing SLD at the beginning of 2004, but nevertheless
continued the same policies as the SLD. In the recent parliamentary
elections they failed to get enough votes to enter the Sejm (parliament).
The SLD, whose parliamentary vote slumped from 41 percent to 11
percent, did not even field a presidential candidate. Its original
candidate, former foreign minister Wlodzimierz Cimoszewicz, threw
in the towel after he was alleged to have not properly provided
his statement of assets as a parliamentarian.
The collapse of the so-called left is a product of their right-wing
politics. Just like the official right-wing parties before them,
they have been voted out of office due to their destruction of
social services and their programme of privatisation and restructuring.
At the end of their legislative period and the presidential term
of Kwasniewski, 30 percent of all Polish children live in poverty
and 12.7 percent on the street! Since 1989, the government has
perpetually rotated between the right- and left-wing parties in
order to prosecute a programme that has made the country a paradise
for big business and hell for the ordinary population.
Over the course of this period, the population has reacted
by continually voting out the government party and turning away
from the voting booths altogether. After the record low voter
turnout for last years European elections, last fortnights
parliamentary elections saw turnout drop to 59.5 percent. Now
for the first time in a presidential election it has fallen below
50 percent. Irrespective of who comes out on top in the presidential
run-off election on October 23, one can no longer speak of a democratically
legitimate president.
The candidates
There are no fundamental differences between Donald Tusk and
Lech Kaczynski. Both are conservative politicians with roots in
the right wing of the Solidarity movement. In 1997, when the Election
Action Solidarity (AWS) formed a coalition government with the
Freedom Union (UW) under Jerzy Buzek, Tusk (UW) and Kaczynski
(AWS) were both parliamentary members in the government. The Buzek
government proceeded to cut pensions, dismantle the public health
sector and push through extensive privatisations. In summer 2000
the UW was voted out of office, but continued to support the AWS
in power. Kaczynski became justice minister.
As this legislative period came to a close, it became obvious
that both the AWS and UW had lost any form of support within the
population. In response Tusk, together with his conservative party
friends, founded the PO while Lech Kaczynski, with his identical
twin brother Jaroslaw, founded the PiS. During the course of the
last parliamentary elections both parties declared their readiness
to form a coalition.
On foreign policy both candidates strive for closer ties with
the United States. Kaczynski recently declared his first foreign
trip would be to the US. It is our most important strategic
partner, he said. For his part, Tusk justified Polands
unpopular participation in the Iraq war, stating that the
future of Europe and Western civilisation in the next 50 or 100
years can only be secured through a stable transatlantic relationship
and partnership with the United States.
Both candidates praised the incumbent president during a television
debate for his work in the Ukraine, where he supported the US-friendly
Orange Revolution, thereby cutting across Russian influence in
the country. At the start of August, as the diplomatic conflict
between Belarus and Poland over the Polish minority in Belarus
came to a head, Tusk travelled to Minsk and declared that Kwasniewski
was doing little to protect Polish interests.
Once can expect a more aggressive policy towards Russia from
both Tusk and Kaczynski. Both candidates have also supported demands
for war reparations from Germany. Kaczynski even tabled a bill
for 30 billion for the damage done to Warsaw in the Second
World War. Tusk, however, is considered to be more European friendly.
Our relationship with Germany is crucial for our status
within the EU, he said during a television debate.
Both the PO and PiS want to press ahead with privatisation,
beef up the state apparatus and base their policies on Catholic
values. Tusk even called Kaczynski his political friend
and hesitated to even take part in the presidential election.
The election campaign itself consisted of devising emphasis in
setting policy and marketing strategies rather than competing
political programs.
Kaczynski portrayed himself as a strong proponent of law
and order. He wants to establish a Polish fourth republic,
cleansed of all socialist influences. In addition he is seeking
to strengthen the rights of the president in relation to the government
via a constitutional amendment and an ethical code.
The 56-year-old Kaczynski also advocates a severe tightening up
of Polish law. If parliament agrees upon a law to reintroduce
the death penalty I would sign it, he said. I want
to be a strong president.
In his former role of mayor of Warsaw he had already made clear
what he thought of democratic rights: on the basis of flimsy arguments
he had forbidden a demonstration of homosexuals in June, while
permitting a meeting of neo-Nazis, which he regarded as normal.
The homosexuals nevertheless met and were then brutally attacked
by neo-Nazis. Kaczynski later criticized the police for protecting
those gathered for an illicit demonstration, and speculated on
a national conspiracy.
Towards the end of the election campaign Kaczynski increasingly
sought to take up social issues in order to distinguish himself
from his protagonist. In a television debate he accused Tusk of
pursuing a program for the rich. He did not want the
state to absolve itself from social responsibility, he said. Such
statements, however, remain abstract. As a cabinet member under
Buzek and as mayor of Warsaw he showed little interest in the
social situation of the large majority of the population.
The 48-year-old Tusk rejects any policies based on social reconciliation.
He told Polish radio that his party stressed that a coalition
government program must avoid the dangerous populist ideas of
the Right and Justice party, particularly in the sphere of economics.
His party calls for a flat tax of 15 percentwhich means
nothing less than an enormous handout for the wealthy.
The building up of the state apparatus favoured by Kaczynski
corresponds fully to the course proposed by Tusk. As early as
1992 Tusk told the Polish newspaper Trybuna that, if necessary,
popular resistance to neo-liberal economic policies should be
beaten back with rubber truncheons and armed force.
Nevertheless in the election campaign Tusk posed in statesmanlike
manner and declared his readiness to compromise. He maintains
close links to the German Christian Democratic Union and its leader
and Germanys new chancellor Angela Merkel, who also appeared
in his election campaign ad.
The latest developments in Poland make clear that the political
elite has shifted further to the right and is preparing new attacks
on Polands working masses. The working population must develop
its own response and confronts the urgent task of developing its
own independent political party.
See Also:
Polish parliamentary elections: record
abstentions and swing to right
[7 October 2005]
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