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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Lili Bayer in Brussels

Poland election: army confirms resignation of top generals in blow to ruling party – as it happened

People outside a TV studio watch Donald Tusk, leader of the Civic Platform party, candidate in the upcoming Polish elections, taking part in a debate in Warsaw.
People outside a TV studio watch Donald Tusk, leader of the Civic Platform party, candidate in the upcoming Polish elections, taking part in a debate in Warsaw. Photograph: Wojtek Radwański/AFP/Getty Images

Summary of the day

  • Two of Poland’s top military commanders, including the chief of the general staff, have tendered their resignations just days before a crucial parliamentary election that will determine the future political course of the country. Read the story.

  • Critics of the ruling Law and Justice party argued that the resignations were partly the outcome to the politicisation of the armed forces by the current government.

  • Jakub Jaraczewski, a research coordinator at Democracy Reporting International, said that smaller parties stole the show at last night’s election debate.

  • Robert Biedroń, a member of the European parliament from Poland’s opposition New Left, told the Guardian that the Left’s candidate “performed brilliantly” in the debate.

  • With only days until Poles vote, candidates across the political spectrum encouraged supporters to maintain their energy.

There appears to be strong interest from Poles living abroad in this weekend’s election

Key event

Robert Biedroń, a member of the European parliament from Poland’s opposition New Left, has told the Guardian today that he feels the Left’s candidate did well in yesterday’s debate, despite what he described as an uneven playing field.

“On the regime public television – TVP – they wanted to bash [Donald] Tusk, but they did not take into account that the show could be stolen by our candidate from the Nowa Lewica – Joanna Scheuring – Wielgus,” Biedroń said in an emailed statement.

“She did great compared to the other men taking part in the ‘debate’. I use this word with the full awareness of the sarcasm behind it – because it had little to do with a real political debate,” he said.

“The questions were formatted in such a way as to become an opportunity for Mateusz Morawiecki to constantly grill Donald Tusk. The important for the TV was not how important the question is, but whether it could be presented in a dichotomy: the PO-PSL government was doing everything wrong, the PiS government was doing everything right,” he added.

“This is what our candidate benefited from,” Biedroń said, “and she performed brilliantly – by smuggling points from the Nowa Lewica election program into each of her statements, referring to private experiences, and exposing the lies of the current ruling party.”

“This electoral game was played with marked cards but we – as the Nowa Lewica – have won anyway,” he added.

Updated

Army confirms resignation of top Polish generals, in blow to ruling party

Two of Poland’s top military commanders, including the chief of the general staff, have tendered their resignations just days before a crucial parliamentary election that will determine the future political course of the country.

The army confirmed on Tuesday that Gen Rajmund Andrzejczak, chief of the general staff, and the operational commander, Lt Gen Tomasz Piotrowski, had submitted their resignations.

The resignations are a blow to the ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party, which has run its election campaign based on a claim it is a patriotic force protecting Poland from external enemies, and is the only party that can take care of Poland’s security.

PiS is seeking a third consecutive term in office, but is facing a challenge from opposition groupings led by the former prime minister and European Council president Donald Tusk. Polls suggest the race will be extremely close.

“It is a symbolic decision. They decided to take this step just before the elections to show that they do not have confidence in this political class,” former foreign minister Jacek Czaputowicz, told the news portal Onet.pl.

Poland’s Gazeta Wyborcza reported that the final straw for the two generals was a decision by interior minister Mariusz Blaszczak to put another commander, Gen. Wiesław Kukuła, in charge of a military operation to evacuate Polish citizens from Israel in recent days. But the tension between the army top brass and the defence ministry has apparently been growing for months, with major decisions made in circumvention of the army leadership.

Read the full article here.

Updated

Pictures from Poland’s polarising campaign

Donald Tusk, the leader of the largest opposition grouping, Civic Coalition (KO), speaks during an election meeting in Kepno on 20 September.
Donald Tusk, the leader of the largest opposition grouping, Civic Coalition (KO), speaks during an election meeting in Kepno on 20 September. Photograph: Kacper Pempel/Reuters
The leader of Poland’s ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party, Jarosław Kaczyński, speaks during a Law and Justice (PiS) party election convention in Przysucha on 9 October.
The leader of Poland’s ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party, Jarosław Kaczyński, speaks during a Law and Justice (PiS) party election convention in Przysucha on 9 October. Photograph: Kacper Pempel/Reuters
One of the Polish Left party leaders and member of the Left party, Joanna Scheuring Wielgus (centre), leaves the TV studio after the election debate broadcast on Polish TV in Warsaw on 9 October.
One of the Polish Left party leaders and member of the Left party, Joanna Scheuring Wielgus (centre), leaves the TV studio after the election debate broadcast on Polish TV in Warsaw on 9 October. Photograph: Radek Pietruszka/EPA

Updated

The resignation of top generals in Poland, days ahead of the election, is garnering more and more attention – and questions.

Women in spotlight as election nears

Reuters’ Anna Wlodarczak-Semczuk writes that with the number of undecided female voters twice as high as men in most age groups, sociologists say the opposition’s success in galvanising them could tip the scales.

“PiS doesn’t respect women,” Magdalena Bojko, a 36-year-old office worker, said during an opposition rally this month.

Asked what she hoped PiS’ main rival, Civic Coalition (KO), might do if it won, she said: “Guarantee we can bear children in dignity, have access to IVF.”

“There is a belief that due to the current legislation in Poland ... one can simply die from being pregnant,” said Antonina Lewandowska from the Foundation for Women and Family Planning. “Women in Poland are terrified.”

Read the full story here.

People hold signs that read: ‘Women’s Hell. Poland’ and ‘Abortion saved my life’ during a protest in June, after a pregnant woman died in hospital in an incident campaigners claim was the fault of Poland’s laws on abortion, which are some of the most restrictive in Europe.
People hold signs that read: ‘Women’s Hell. Poland’ and ‘Abortion saved my life’ during a protest in June, after a pregnant woman died in hospital in an incident campaigners claim was the fault of Poland’s laws on abortion, which are some of the most restrictive in Europe. Photograph: Kacper Pempel/Reuters

Updated

What do the polls say?

The margins are very tight – and much depends on how smaller parties perform.

An IBRiS poll commissioned for Polsat earlier this month put the Law and Justice-led coalition at 34.6%, the Civic Platform-led coalition at 27.9%, and The Left at 11.4%. According to this poll, Third Way would not enter parliament.

A Kantar poll, conducted for TVN at the beginning of October, found that the Law and Justice-led group would get 34%. But in this poll, the Civic Platform-led coalition would get 30%, The Left 10% and Third Way 9%. Put together, this poll found that these three opposition groupings would have a majority of seats.

Updated

More than 5 million people watched last night’s televised election debate, reports Gazeta Wyborcza.

People are seen outside a tv studio as they watch Poland’s Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, candidate in the upcoming Polish elections, taking part in a debate in Warsaw, Poland on October 9, 2023.
The Polish prime minister Mateusz Morawiecki, a candidate in the upcoming Polish elections, taking part in a debate in Warsaw, Poland on 9 October 9. Photograph: Wojtek Radwański/AFP/Getty Images

Updated

Poland’s elections on 15 October could give the ruling nationalist Law and Justice (PiS) party an unprecedented third term in office, or hand its longstanding opposition the chance to reverse what critics describe as eight years of democratic backsliding.

Another possibility is that they end in stalemate, with neither party able to form a coalition. Whatever happens, Poland’s politics will remain deeply polarised after a ballot that – amid war in Ukraine and a bitter dispute with the EU – is of more than usual interest abroad.

Read the full explainer ahead of Sunday’s vote.

Opposition candidate Donald Tusk
Opposition candidate Donald Tusk Photograph: Damian Burzykowski/Newspix/ZUMA Press/Shutterstock

Polish opposition puts spotlight on generals' resignation

A number of high-profile opposition Polish politicians have criticised Law and Justice after the resignation of two senior military figures this week, arguing that the move reflects poorly on the ruling party’s leadership.

Michał Szczerba, a member of the Polish parliament from the opposition Civic Platform, said that the environment was becoming more dangerous, despite Law and Justice’s campaign promise of a safe Poland. The resignation did not look serious for allies, he added.

Updated

A planned media appearance by Polish president, Andrzej Duda, has been cancelled after news that top generals have resigned, Gazeta Wyborcza reports.

Updated

Law and Justice focuses campaign on migration

The ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party has drawn from the classic rightwing populist playbook and have focused its campaign on migration.

The party has even launched a referendum on the same day to mobilise its base to go and vote – and two of the four leading questions on the referendum are about migration.

The evening news frequently features horror stories from Lampedusa and elsewhere in Europe.

In last night’s debate, the prime minister, Mateusz Morawiecki, said: “We will protect Poles from rapes, from cars being set on fire like in Stockholm. PiS is a guarantee of security.”

The PiS claim about keeping Poles safe is partly based around a wall it constructed at the border with Belarus last year to keep refugees and migrants out. But behind the newsreels of a safe, secure Poland is a story of a humanitarian crisis. The Guardian’s Shaun Walker spent several days reporting this long story from the border published last week.

The prime minister and Law and Justice member Mateusz Morawiecki speaking to a crowd in Warsaw, Poland on 9 October.
The prime minister and Law and Justice member Mateusz Morawiecki speaking to a crowd in Warsaw, Poland on 9 October. Photograph: Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto/Shutterstock

Updated

The Polish prime minister, Mateusz Morawiecki, from the conservative ruling Law and Justice party, said this morning that his party was one step away from victory and there were four days of hard work left.

He called on supporters to embark on maximum mobilisation.

Updated

The Left’s candidate Joanna Scheuring-Wielgus reminded supporters this morning that there’s only four days to go until the Polish election – and that they should continue persuading and encouraging.

Updated

It is time for a new path, Third Way candidate Szymon Hołownia wrote on social media today as the campaign enters its final days.

Updated

Opposition candidate Donald Tusk was visibly nervous during last night’s debate and did not perform particularly well.

But with the opposition’s chances of forming a workable coalition reliant on the Third Way coalition of Szymon Hołownia passing the 8% threshold – a mark they have been hovering only just above in polls – Cambridge professor Stanley Bill makes the point that the debate could be a net gain for the opposition.

Hołownia is being widely credited with the best performance in the televised debate.

Updated

Top Polish military leaders resign

Two senior Polish military figures have abruptly resigned, days ahead of the country’s election.

Gen Rajmund Andrzejczak, chief of the general staff of the Polish armed forces, and Gen Tomasz Piotrowski, have both submitted their resignations, Rzeczpospolita reported.

Gen Rajmund Andrzejczak, chief of the general staff of the Polish armed forces at the 84th anniversary of the outbreak of the second world war in Westerplatte in military uniform.
Gen Rajmund Andrzejczak, chief of the general staff of the Polish armed forces at the 84th anniversary of the outbreak of the second world war in Westerplatte. Photograph: Mateusz Słodkowski/SOPA Images/Shutterstock

Updated

Many Poles are questioning their relationship with the Catholic church – and some cite its closeness to the government as a key reason, write the Associated Press’ Joanna Kozlowska and Michal Dyjuk.

Patrycja Kalecinska, a 21-year-old university student from Czestochowa, said the church had “had a disastrous impact on politics”.

A 2021 study by a leading Polish pollster suggested the number of regularly practising Catholics aged 18-25 had fallen by more than half in the previous six years, the AP reported.

Updated

‘My trust is limited’: feminist takes aim at Polish opposition

A feminist activist and electoral candidate who was dropped by Donald Tusk’s opposition alliance in Poland after she expressed support for abortion access after 12 weeks of pregnancy has said her trust in the veteran liberal conservative to fight for women’s rights is “limited”.

Jana Shostak, a 30-year-old performance artist, has a strong record of advocacy on behalf of Belarusian democracy, refugees and women’s rights. When she announced she was running for parliament in the election on 15 October – joining the coalition of the leading opposition party, Civic Platform (PO) – Poland’s progressives were excited.

Shostak, who has joint Polish and Belarusian citizenship, seemed to offer an antidote to the tired and cautiously moderate image of the centre-right PO, which has been trying to wrangle power from the ruling Law and Justice party (PiS) for the last eight years. She planned to run for election as a member of the Green party, a junior centre-left partner in the opposition coalition.

But, little over a month after her announcement, she was dropped by the coalition, after a video interview in which she appeared to express support for abortion access in second and third trimester. Without making any specific policy recommendations, when asked if women should have the choice to end their pregnancy at any point, she said: “Yes.”

In the run-up to next month’s election, Donald Tusk, the former Polish prime minister and former president of the European Council, sought the support of Poland’s feminists. He made a commitment to gender parity among his coalition’s parliamentary candidates and promised that, if elected as prime minister, he would legalise abortion on request up to 12 weeks of pregnancy.

But in recent months Tusk has been making conciliatory gestures to conservative voters, which Shostak and others have described as “populist and xenophobic”.

Read the full story here.

Updated

Poland’s TV’s ‘propaganda’ under scrutiny as bitterly polarised election looms

Poland is under attack from both east and west. Foes in Berlin and Moscow, using their proxy Donald Tusk, plan to destabilise the country, overrun it with uncontrolled migration and subjugate Polish politics to external influence.

That, at least, would be the view of someone who received all their news from Poland’s public television channel, TVP, where correspondents and anchors on the nightly news programme parrot government talking points and warn of the dangerous goals of the political opposition.

“Brussels’ attacks on Poland are inspired by the opposition,” said a news anchor last week, before cutting to a story claiming Germany is financing NGOs helping to bring illegal immigrants to Europe and other stories about Tusk’s nefarious doings during his previous term as prime minister.

Anchors speak daily about an “invasion” of Europe by migrants, and the government’s brave measures to stop it. Scandals involving ministers are ignored.

With Poland in the final week of campaigning before a crucial parliamentary election, the role of public television in the bitterly polarising campaign is under scrutiny.

Read the full article here.

Updated

Small parties steal the show at Polish debate

“Neither of the two big headliners of yesterday’s blatantly biased debate – prime minister Mateusz Morawiecki from PiS and Civic Coalition leader Donald Tusk – performed well,” Jakub Jaraczewski, a research coordinator at Democracy Reporting International, told the Guardian this morning.

“It was the politicians from three smaller committees vying for the third place in the elections that stole the show: Szymon Hołownia, the co-leader of the centrist-agrarian coalition Third Way, Joanna Scheuring-Wielgus representing The Left, and Krzysztof Bosak from the far-right libertarian party Konfederacja.

“At stake on Sunday’s vote is nothing less than the future course of Poland within the European Union,” Jaraczewski said.

“If PiS manages to form a majority and rule for the third term, Poland will likely continue to erode its own rule of law and thus escalate the conflict with Brussels over judicial independence and fundamental rights,” he said.

“If the opposition prevails and builds a broad coalition ranging from centre-right to far-left,” he added, “a new government will face the daunting task of repairing the rule of law and restoring the country’s standing in the EU.”

Updated

Welcome to the blog

Good morning and welcome back to the Europe live blog.

Today we will be looking ahead to Poland’s parliamentary election, scheduled for this Sunday.

The election is garnering significant attention both within Poland and beyond, as the ruling conservative Law and Justice (PiS) party tries to retain power.

It is facing an opposition coalition led by the former Polish prime minister and ex-president of the European Council Donald Tusk. But the outcome may yet be decided by how smaller parties perform.

Send comments and tips to lili.bayer@theguardian.com

Updated

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