In the case of a referendum, the answer is clear, 95 percent. Poles will answer that they don’t want illegal immigrants, PSL MP Marek Sawicki said in the PAP Studio.
Asked in the PAP Studio if in his opinion it is worth asking Poland in a referendum if they agree to the displacement of illegal immigrants, Sawicki replied that “nobody wants illegal immigrants”. He added that the answer, he says, is “clear, 95 percent.” Poles will answer that they do not want illegal immigrants.
According to the PSL MP, one of the solutions to the migration problem is to move food across the EU to famine regions and support these regions to support local agriculture.
It also involves financial support for locating these immigrants outside the European Union
– added.
And that’s all you have to do. And this should be discussed seriously on the basis of proposals and agreements. The easiest way is to say liberum veto, I do not allow (…), the problem is how to convince these 27 countries of your point of view. And you just need to talk to them. It was done by (Italian Prime Minister) Giorgia Meloni
– he said.
To the editor’s comment that in the case of Italy and Poland we are dealing with a different situation, forced by a different geographical location, Sawicki judged that “they are really in a less dangerous situation than Poland.” He stressed that due to the recent easing of Belarusian visa policy, attacks on the Polish border cannot be ruled out.
I don’t think the threat from the Mediterranean is greater than the threat from Moscow and Minsk at the moment. So here too we have to be ready for that
– he said.
Referendum and relocation
Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki confirmed the intention to hold a referendum on the relocation of migrants and parliamentary elections at the same time.
Also to keep costs low; running separately is an additional cost
he added.
EU interior ministers have adopted a negotiating position on migration reform in the EU. This position will form the basis for negotiations between the Council Presidency and the European Parliament. Poland and Hungary voted against support for the so-called migration pact. It includes, for example, the system of “compulsory solidarity”. This means that while “no Member State will ever be obliged to relocate”, “an annual minimum number of relocations will be set from the Member States where most people enter the EU to the Member States less likely to be relocated”.
This number was set at 30,000.
The minimum number of financial contributions per year is set at 20,000. euros for moving. These numbers can be increased if necessary and situations where no need for solidarity is foreseen in a given year are also taken into account
– we read in the communiqué of the EU Council.
In fact, as a senior EU diplomat who took part in the negotiations explained to PAP, this means a choice between the relocation of migrants and a financial counterpart in the event of a lack of willingness to take them in.
In mid-June, the Sejm passed a resolution expressing opposition to the EU’s mechanism for the relocation of illegal migrants, which commits the government to vigorously oppose the proposal. PiS leader Jarosław Kaczyński declared in the Sejm that the issue of relocation of migrants in the European Union should be the subject of a referendum.
Government spokesman Piotr Müller told PAP that at the next EU summit, Poland will maintain its position that Poland does not agree to the forced displacement mechanism of migrants.
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— There is a decision on the law on combined voting, which has been submitted to the Sejm. Prime Minister: The elections and the migration referendum will take place together
— How the Germans Convince Us to Hold a Referendum. Berlin’s actions confirm the correctness of rejecting forced resettlements
Mon/PAP
Source: wPolityce