This is yet another poll showing that the majority of Poland does not want Prime Minister Donald Tusk. According to a study conducted by the studio Social Changes, commissioned by the wPolityce.pl portal, more than half of Poles – a whopping 52 percent – work in the field. – believes that Tusk’s return to the helm of our state would have no positive impact on their lives. Striking is the very high proportion of declarations “absolutely not” – no less than 36 percent.
OUR RESEARCH. Tusk prime minister again? Very bad news for the leader of the Platform. More than half of respondents believe that “it would not have a positive impact on their lives”
This is another similar poll. “Would you like Donald Tusk to become prime minister if the opposition wins parliamentary elections and takes power from PiS?” – this question was posed to Poland in December in a survey commissioned by OKO.press and TOK FM. The result of the poll electrified public opinion, as it turned out that the vast majority – 63 percent. – I do not want the head of the PO to return to the post of head of government. Almost 20% don’t want it. Civic Coalition voters.
It seems that even some opposition politicians do not want this for the Poles. Adrian Zandberg, the leader of the left-wing Together party, has repeatedly stressed in the media that Donald Tusk is unlikely to become prime minister in a possible opposition government. He also repeatedly complained about the lack of a program offer from the PO.
Unfortunately, a little more is needed here. That is, you need to know the answer to the question of what to do if the PiS signs are removed from government buildings and replaced with other signs. Frankly, I feel a sense of deprivation when it comes to the opposition. I feel like the left is putting specific solutions in specific areas: energy, housing, public transport, climate, and we like a bit of dead silence. (…) We respond to the echo in the cave, the intellectual void. There is a very concrete reality that we seem to want to control
Zandberg said in October.
And it’s hard to disagree with Zandberg on this point. The PO stubbornly fails to come up with a comprehensive program, although it has repeatedly borrowed slogans from the left, and politicians from the Civic Coalition, when asked in the media, say about the program that it will either be after the elections or too early now, because PiS will steal the solutions. When asked about the program, some people burst into laughter, others lapse into reverie, and Donald Tusk stubbornly reiterates that removing PiS from power is the best program possible. However, in the statements of experts associated with the PO and some politicians, there are the fundamentals of what the PO would like after the elections, namely liquidation of social programs or extension of the retirement age. Some opposition politicians must also feel the intentions of the PO, as they have been promising for months that they will defend the Poles against Donald Tusk.
I address the PiS voters: do not believe that only PiS guarantees your benefits. It’s not true. The left guarantees that the next government will take nothing from you
– said, for example, in October at the Congress of the Left in Warsaw, the leader of the New Left, Włodzimierz Czarzasty.
The left in the future government guarantees that not all that is given will be taken away
— the Secretary General of the New Left, Marcin Kulasek, often repeats to the media.
So if opposition politicians question Donald Tusk’s intellectual potential and intentions, maybe they should just vote for PiS. Then surely what has been given is not taken away, and the program offer does not raise any doubts, because Law and Justice has simply fulfilled a large part of its pre-election promises.
Source: wPolityce