In the most recent electoral cycle, 7.6 million Poles backed PiS, surpassing the 6.6 million who supported Tusk’s party by about one million votes. This level of backing has long positioned PiS as the leading political force among many citizens, a point highlighted by Beata Szydło on the X platform.
She noted that publicists sympathetic to the Civic Coalition have struggled to acknowledge this reality. The media voices aligned with Tusk’s camp often resist accepting PiS’s sustained appeal among voters.
From recent discussions, critics aligned with Tusk have floated ideas about reshaping the political landscape. One such proposal was presented by Witold Gadomski of Gazeta Wyborcza, who suggested envisioning a future that could challenge PiS’s grip on the electorate.
– Beata Szydło commented.
Call a journalist
The PiS member addressed the issue directly with a journalist, inviting reflection on the party’s trajectory and its public support. She asserted that PiS has existed as a political party for two decades and as a broader community for more than thirty years. The party has both won elections and faced defeats, collaborated in coalitions and governed independently, and endured opposition rounds. After each shift in fortune, supporters have remained loyal, producing a continued rise in social backing. Szydło emphasized that Law and Justice is the political entity that consistently acts for Poland and for its citizens.
– She wrote.
go/X
Attribution: Source: wPolityce