Current:Home > MarketsPolish opposition leader Donald Tusk seeks to boost his election chances with a rally in Warsaw -TrueNorth Finance Path
Polish opposition leader Donald Tusk seeks to boost his election chances with a rally in Warsaw
View
Date:2025-04-12 06:25:00
WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Polish opposition leader Donald Tusk is facing an uphill battle to win new hearts in his efforts to unseat the nationalist conservative government in Poland’s upcoming parliamentary election.
The ex-prime minister and former European Union leader returned to Polish politics several years ago, seeking to breathe new life into his languishing party and win back power — and reverse what many view as a degradation of fundamental rights and ties with European partners under the governing populist Law and Justice party.
Tusk, 66, is hoping a major rally that he organized for Sunday will energize his supporters.
But he faces many obstacles, including divisions among his opposition ranks and, even more importantly, powerful government forces that depict him as disloyal to the nation.
Shaping the campaign is a long and bitter personal rivalry between Tusk and Law and Justice chief Jaroslaw Kaczynski, who is the country’s 74-year-old de facto leader. Kaczynski, other government figures and state media repeatedly allege that Tusk’s time as prime minister from 2007 to 2014 was harmful to Poland.
They point to the good terms he was on with then-German Chancellor Angela Merkel to make unproven allegations that he represented the interests of Germany, a neighboring country that brutally occupied Poland during World War II. They also accuse him of abandoning Poland when he went to Brussels in 2014 to become European Council president, a top EU post.
“Herr Donald, you left Poland to serve German interests in Brussels, for big money. … I gave up a high salary in order to serve Poland,” Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, a former banker, recently tweeted after Tusk questioned whether he was hiding his wealth.
Tusk has denied being partisan to Germany and laughs off the allegations.
Tusk’s “March of a Million Hearts” on Sunday comes two weeks before the Oct. 15 vote. His electoral alliance, the Civic Coalition, trails a few percentage points behind Law and Justice in opinion polls.
The march, the coalition’s biggest campaign event, was inspired by the huge success of a similar march on June 4 that drew hundreds of thousands of opposition supporters from across Poland.
One of Tusk’s greatest challenges is convincing supporters that the incumbent party can be defeated despite having consolidated huge power.
“On June 4, you gave Poland hope, so I am asking you now: On Oct. 1, let’s give not just hope, but the full belief in victory, in our success in removing these evil people from power,” Tusk said when announcing Sunday’s march.
Tusk has been pushing back against the populist government’s attempts to cast him as unpatriotic. His campaign symbol is a heart in the national colors of white and red to show that “we all have Poland in our hearts.”
The June 4 march saw a huge outpouring of solidarity because it was held after Law and Justice passed contentious legislation establishing a state commission for investigating Russian influence in Poland. The law was seen as the governing party’s way of targeting Tusk and removing him from public life. Instead, it rallied support for Tusk and boosted his electoral chances.
Opposition groups put aside their differences and marched with Tusk then. But this time, an opposition alliance called the Third Way — a coalition of the centrist Poland 2050 party and agrarian Polish People’s Party (PSL) — won’t take part.
The Third Way participated then because the Russian influence commission “made it very clear that the ruling team, using uncivilized methods, wants to get at the leader of the biggest opposition party,” Sen. Jan Filip Libicki, of PSL, told The Associated Press. “There was a reason for this extraordinary mobilization.”
Libicki says there is no such pressing matter now.
These divisions complicate Tusk’s attempts to return to power. His electoral alliance includes his Civic Platform party and three other small parties. However, apart from the Third Way, there is also the Left party in the opposition camp and it’s competing for younger voters against the far-right Confederation party. The party has been growing in popularity, especially among young men fed up with the political parties that have dominated Poland for most of the post-Communist era.
Rafal Chwedoruk, a political scientist with the University of Warsaw, says Tusk’s coalition, the Left and the Third Way together seem poised to get a majority of the votes, judging by opinion polls. But they haven’t worked out a joint electoral strategy.
Some analysts see the disunity in the opposition as partly Tusk’s fault.
Tusk is a charismatic leader with long political experience at home and internationally. But he also has a reputation for being domineering toward others in his party, and that has led some to leave and join other groups, like Libicki did in 2018.
Tusk recently moved his centrist alliance to the left, courting women and younger voters. Civic Platform has traditionally taken a fairly conservative position on abortion. But after a near-total ban was imposed under Law and Justice, Tusk vowed to liberalize the abortion law and has threatened to ban party members who criticize his plan from running in the election.
Lawmaker Boguslaw Sonik quit Tusk’s party this year amid disagreements on abortion and the general drift to the left, and is now unaffiliated.
“A party cannot be run in a military style,” he said on commercial radio station RMF FM. “These are matters of conscience.”
veryGood! (4)
Related
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Precision missile strike on cafe hosting soldier’s wake decimates Ukrainian village
- A 13-year old boy was fatally stabbed in an argument on a New York City bus
- U.S. lawmakers led by Senate Majority Leader Schumer arrive in China on first such visit since 2019
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Bear and 2 cubs captured, killed after sneaking into factory in Japan amid growing number of reported attacks
- A taxiing airplane collides with a Chicago airport shuttle, injuring 2 people
- Inter Miami vs. FC Cincinnati score, highlights: Cincinnati ruins Lionel Messi’s return
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- UN expert: Iran is unlawfully detaining human rights activists, including new Nobel peace laureate
Ranking
- Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
- New York City mayor wraps up Latin America trip with call for ‘right to work’ for migrants in US
- To Be Greener, Get Rid Of Your Grass
- 2023 UAW strike update: GM agrees to place electric vehicle battery plants under national contract
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Rockets fired from Gaza into Tel Aviv and Jerusalem as Hamas militants target Israel
- Angus Cloud’s Childhood Friends Honor “Fearless” Euphoria Star 2 Months After His Death
- Coco Gauff's 16-match winning streak stopped by Iga Swiatek in China Open semifinal
Recommendation
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
After shooting at Morgan State University in Baltimore, police search for 2 suspects
Former pitcher Jim Poole dies of ALS at 57. He gave up winning homer in '95 World Series
Have an heirloom ruined by climate disaster? There's a hotline to call for help
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
Teen stabbed to death on New York City MTA bus, police say
Why beating Texas this year is so important to Oklahoma and coach Brent Venables
Chicago-area man charged in connection to Juneteenth party shooting where 1 died and 22 were hurt