His credibility is nil. He might as well declare the Silesian carnival to be a national dish – Jerzy Polaczek, Member of Parliament of Silesia, summed up PO leader Donald Tusk’s tour of Silesia in an interview with wPolityce.pl.
Tusk discovered coal in Silesia
When asked about Tusk’s statement that his political camp would like to lead to Polish coal mining, MP Polaczek recalls that Silesia has been mined for hundreds of years.
His camp closed mines, and now he remembers we have coal worth mining? Even this example is a good illustration of the former Prime Minister’s merry-go-round of statements, a kind of roulette where, depending on the year, month, day and even specific situations, he does not hesitate to make radically different statements and contradictory. We’ve all gotten used to Tusk saying something completely different today than before.
Polak says.
“A Collection of Reheated Schnitzels”
Literally everything we heard in Bytom, Pszczyna, Żywiec is a collection of reheated political opposition chops that sometimes provoke hilarity
– judges.
If one could try to get a general idea of what Tusk is doing in Silesia, and how that compares to reality, it would seem that he is saying “I will give everything to everyone”, and the day after the election the public will be asked : “who knows where is the money buried for what I promised to give.” And with “concern for Poland” he will ask those who know to hurry, because it is a pity every day for the sake of Poland
says the Silesian politician with sarcasm.
Tusk’s brutality
MP Polaczek considers Tusk’s reference to the history and tradition of Upper Silesia, while promoting radical abortion demands, particularly brutal.
We here in Silesia are horrified at this hodge-podge of the opposition leader’s program, especially when we compare Tusk’s actions, his powers of persuasion with his “achievements” as President of the European Council
he adds.
Late stage
The PiS politician estimates that “the current, often contradictory proposals of the opposition and its leader in response to various policies of the concrete United Right government, formerly Beata Szydło, and now Prime Minister Morawiecki, are a late-stage program.”
That the opposition leader’s current proposals are implausible and contradict what he presented last year is most clearly reflected in the energy issues
Polak says.
The rhetoric of Tusk’s piarist symbols and promises was rightly summed up by one of the publicists that he might as well declare that the Silesian carmine (a dish of Silesian cuisine, a kind of minced meat cutlets – editor’s note) will become a national dish. Because this man can promise anything and give no importance to it
he adds.
Test for Tusk
Finally, Jerzy Polaczek has “a simple test for the opposition, for the PO and its leader.
If Donald Tusk in Upper Silesia wants to show that he is credible at least at an elementary level, let him support the opposition to the European Commission’s methane directive, which is a direct blow to the Polish mining industry. This will be a test of the ability to combine its responsibility to the state with the voices of both the governing coalition and the opposition, in defense of our country’s interests
he ends.
READ ALSO:
– ONLY HERE. Suski: Tusk is weak, he fails to unite the opposition. His speeches resemble excerpts from Monty Python
– Brilliant! Tusk portrays himself as a defender of Silesia. He wants to transfer the areas of the mines to local governments. “Ruins turn into thriving places”
— OUR INTERVIEW. prof. Maliszewski: The head of the PO divides and threatens. Thanks to this Tusk syndrome, we are getting support in the polls
— OUR INTERVIEW. Kloc: If Donald Tusk came to test his PR tricks in Silesia, he was in the wrong place. Miners do not tolerate lies
rm
Source: wPolityce