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Poland’s conservative president-elect to be tough opponent for PM

Poland president, Carole Noruki, plays a largely festive role, but his impact on the country’s policy in the next five years may be deep.

Nuruki supporters, the national opposition of conservative and justice law (PIS), feels reactivated after losing 18 months ago to the European Union’s Donald Tusk coalition, and sees its success as a first step to return to power.

The President of Poland has a limited impact on foreign and defensive policy, but he can propose and veto forces. The Task government lacks a large parliamentary majority enough to cancel the presidential veto.

The outgoing conservative president, Doda, used his powers to ban to prevent the prime minister from providing many of his main promises to his campaign.

It includes giving Polish women the right to legal miscarriage until the twelfth week of pregnancy, legalizing civil partnerships, including gay relationships, accelerating developments in the wild wind farm and removing the political impact from the judiciary.

Noroki, a 42 -year -old social historian, is expected to be widely to be a tougher TUSK from Duda. Some believe that the resulting paralysis can entice the government by holding early elections before the deadline in the fall 2027.

“At all possibilities, that early elections will mean, because it will appreciate any government’s law,” Konstanti Gibred, a journalist for the weekly magazine, Kulterora Liberalna, told the BBC.

“Constitutional, it is difficult to carry out early elections if the government does not want them, but if there is a defeat to defeat and cannot judge, they may decide that it is the least evil,” he explained.

The Tusk government has a parliamentary majority, so it can stay in office until the fall of 2027 unless the coalition is separated.

This union includes the Popular, Mediterranean, and leftists Party, and this is a major reason for TUSK to reach an agreement on issues such as abortion and civil partnerships.

Instead, the government can decide the early elections in its best interest.

Noruki is a proud Polish patriot, a conservative Catholic who opposes illegal immigration, and the legal rights of persons in gay relations, and the liberalization of the country of strict abortion in the country.

He believes that Tusk’s vision of strengthening Poland in the main current of the European Union by relying on good relations with Brussels, Berlin and Paris contradicts the Polish national interests. He says that these interests are the best, by standing to Germany when their opinions diverge and do not give up more powers for Brussels. Noruki opposes the climate proposals in the European Union, such as the green deal, because it says that reducing greenhouse gas emissions will harm young Polish farmers.

Noruki supports the continuous military and humanitarian assistance of neighboring Ukraine. Poland is the home of the International Center for Supplies to Kyiv. But he does not believe that Ukraine joins NATO or the European Union, while the Russian aggression continues to enhance the security of Poland.

He is a supporter of US President Donald Trump and criticized the approach followed by Ukraine President Voludmir Zelinski during The famous oval office wearing clothes. US Secretary of Internal Security Christie sleep traveled to Poland a few days before the elections to support Noruki, the severe amateur boxer, describing him as a “strong” leader like Trump.

The electoral result was close, similar to the one that Doda won against the mayor of Warsaw, the liberal Warsaw, Rafal Tarsinski, five years ago, a sign that political polarization in the country was not hidden.

In a premature victory speech, which was delivered after a survey, he gave him a high victory immediately after the voting ended on Sunday night, TRZASKOWSKI pledged to be the head of all columns.

Speaking at the same time, Noruki did not make such promises. Instead, he told his supporters that his campaign was able to unify the “National Camp” in Poland. None of the candidates inspired confidence that he would make constructive efforts to reach the other side.

The prolonged conflict between the two political groups that has dominated Polish policy for two decades may be fed to increasing support for the anti -Foundation parties, such as the right -wing extremist federation or the difficult left.

The young liberation candidate, the Confederate, Selomer Mintzen, continued the recent gains of the group, as he ranked third in the first round of the presidential elections. Can it increase its support, and it may be persuaded to join a government led by PIS in the future?

Other Union leader KrZysztof Bosak denied the last possibility on Monday, saying that the two parties would not approach because they were fighting for the same voters.

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2025-06-02 10:38:00

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