“It is hard work, but hard work can yield results and a lot of satisfaction. Not only for the president and those who participate in power, but above all and above all: for the residents of Płock,” PiS President Jarosław Kaczyński said at a meeting with the residents of Płock. He announced that Piotr Uździcki is the candidate for the presidency of this city.
Before the PiS leader’s speech, his name was sung in the audience.
Thank you very much, I say it often, I repeat myself, but of all that God has given, the name is the best
– Jarosław Kaczyński said in the beginning.
The meeting of Free Poles takes place at a special time. After all, our election campaign has already started and the date has already been set. Here we have Mr. Piotr Uździcki, our candidate for the President of Płock
– he announced.
I believe that after these elections the long rule of Mr. Nowakowski, who sees the fight against PiS as his main task and not what local government officials should do, will come to an end.
– he emphasized.
I believe in Mr. Uździcki, lecturer at the Masovian University, a man with many years of teaching and economic experience. Someone who can make the effort. Because it is hard work, but hard work that can yield results and a lot of satisfaction. Not only for the president and those who participate in power, but above all and above all: for the residents of Płock
– added.
Development of Orlen
As an important, serious city on the Vistula River, Płock is mainly characterized by one workplace: Orlen.
– said the PiS leader.
Today Orlen has 66,000. employees and in many countries, but the headquarters, the base, is here. It was also built here as the Płock Refinery. It was a long time ago, in 1963, that Gomułka spoke. And later its fate was more or less the same as that of other major establishments. The refinery grew, but at the same time it could not really serve the real development of the Polish economy under the communist system.
– added.
Płock was poisoned, there were many diseases, puddles turned yellow after rain. And then came the 80’s, let’s skip that one. It’s already the nineties. Płock is already creating a new type of economy, but not in the way it should be
– he said.
On the one hand, it is a place of production and development. There was a lot of money here, which disappeared into different pockets and did not benefit the development of the refinery. And the time came, with the great repair introduced by the Good Change, and the situation changed. Orlen has become a company with an extremely dynamic development
– emphasized Jarosław Kaczyński.
Extremely dynamic. Last year annual turnover was PLN 350 billion. Much, much more than in 2015, when we took over. Everything has grown over the years. Number of gas stations, income, investments. These are really enormous amounts. International viewing figures also rose. In one at three degrees, in the other at two
– he assessed.
It seems that everyone should be happy, because it serves the city, but it also serves, in the full sense of the word, all of Poland
– he pointed.
““Frenzied Attack”
It all comes together in the hands of one man who can. It is Mr. Daniel Obajtek. Just a few days ago, the president of Orlen
– said the president of PiS.
The question arises as to why this new government is attacking Orlen with so much anger. Why is this enormous success of the Polish economy the subject of an almost fanatical, sometimes frenzied attack?
– added.
It can be said that there are two very important reasons. The first concerns international relations. Already when the EU the so-called Due to the corrective circumstances that oblige Orlen to sell various elements of its assets, we are faced with a paradoxical situation. Throughout Europe there are companies bigger than Orlen, many times bigger. Perhaps there will come a time when the authorities will change and their pursuit will be effective, but it will take years. They go far beyond what Orlen can currently produce and sell, and somehow they can work. And here you need to enter restrictions
– he pointed.
aja/Youtube
Source: wPolityce