Dariusz Rosati, former member of the Polish United Workers’ Party, must be able to perfectly deal with a situation in which ‘strong people’ enter the editorial offices of the public media and try to take them over by force. This is evident from his latest entry on the X platform.
“I would leave TVP Sport…’
Rosati proposed to “suspend the operation of TVP” from January 1 and “broadcast the black board” 24 hours a day, referring to President Andrzej Duda’s decision to veto the 2024 budget law, which included PLN 3 billion for public media.
I think that from January 1, TVP can be suspended and broadcast 24/7 a black board with the inscription: “Due to the President’s decision to suspend the financing of TVP, the broadcast of the program is suspended until further notice. ” I would leave TVP Sport
– He wrote.
Interestingly, Rosati tries to blame the president for “suspending the financing of TVP” when Civic Platform politicians, led by Donald Tusk, repeatedly attacked Telewizja Polska. It is worth recalling that signatures have even been collected for the liquidation of TVP Info, which has not been broadcasting for several days because the channel’s television signal was illegally switched off. And when PiS subsidized the public media, opposition politicians criticized this decision. Is it correct now?
Rosati misses communism?
Users of the X platform responded to Rosati’s entry.
Do you miss communism? It shows.
And that is good. When PiS subsidized TVP with our money, it was bad, and now that more money would come, it was good… Logic…
It is always better than propagandists from the television set up by the services, who illegally occupy the TVP building.
And I think old communists should sit down and never get involved in politics. You supported the criminal communist system. How dare you say something?
Determine the version internally, because the Prime Minister probably promised that the money for TVP would be transferred to pediatric oncology.
There will be no money for TVP, the Prime Minister promised.
kk/X
Source: wPolityce