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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Poland populists eye win on promises of prosperity

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Mary SIBIERSKI -


Poles voted on Sunday in a an election the governing populists look set to win after a flurry of generous welfare measures coupled with attacks on western values but their majority could be at risk.


Author Olga Tokarczuk, a known government critic who won the Nobel Prize for Literature last Thursday, gave the opposition an unexpected last-minute boost, urging Poles to choose wisely “between democracy and authoritarianism,” calling the vote the “most important” since Poland threw off communism in 1989.


In office since 2015 and led by ex-premier Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the right-wing Law and Justice (PiS) party has focused on poorer rural voters by coupling family values with a popular new child allowance, tax breaks and hikes to pensions and the minimum wage.


Widely regarded as Poland’s de facto leader, Kaczynski has stoked deep social division by attacking minorities and rejecting Western liberal values, all with the tacit blessing of Poland’s influential Catholic Church which holds sway over rural voters.


Kaczynski is among several populist leaders in the European Union favouring greater national sovereignty over the federalism championed by powerhouses France and Germany.


The PiS has also sought close ties with the Trump administration. Poland has long regarded the US as the primary guarantor of its security within the Nato alliance and as a bulwark against Russia, its Soviet-era master with whom tensions still run high.


“The PiS takes care of workers, they raised the minimum wage and created the 500+ child allowance,” Michal, a 34-year-old Warsaw electrician and PiS supporter, said after voting in Warsaw.


“In foreign policy, the PiS is standing up for Poland, not just blindly agreeing to what Germany or France want,” he added, declining to provide his full name.


Backed by outgoing EU Council President Donald Tusk — from Poland and Kaczynski’s arch-rival on the domestic scene — the opposition Citizen’s Coalition (KO) draws mainly on urban voters upset by the PiS’s divisive politics, judicial reforms threatening the rule of law, graft scandals and monopolisation of public media.


“I voted for democracy, to safeguard the future of my grandchildren,” Jadwiga Sperska, a 64-year-old working pensioner and KO supporter, said outside a Warsaw polling station.


“The current government’s direction could lead us out of the EU,” she added. Condemning the close church ties, but sharing the PIS’s welfare goals, the left is set to return to parliament after a four-year hiatus. “I support an open, tolerant society and without


aggression,” said Monika Pronkiewicz, a public sector worker and left-wing voter in Warsaw. — AFP


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