
Pub takes centre stage in presidential race as Polish voters go for another round
Even before 29 million
Poles
choose a new president on Sunday, many believe their country's political future has already been decided – in a pub three hours northwest of Warsaw.
Sunday's presidential run-off is a close race between two very different candidates: Rafal Trzaskowski, the capital's pro-EU, liberal mayor; and Karol Nawrocki, a national conservative historian with Maga-like ambitions.
The new head of state, with control of the defence forces and powers to veto legislation, will shape Poland's path in the EU and Nato. And supercharge – or hobble – prime minister
Donald Tusk
's efforts to deliver on political promises that took him back to power in December 2023.
With just one percentage point separating them, both presidential hopefuls are courting Slawomir Mentzen, a far-right libertarian politician and pub-owner.
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The 38-year-old finished third in the presidential election first round almost a fortnight ago, making his 15 per cent voter bloc now the most valuable commodity in Polish politics.
Poland's conservative presidential candidate Karol Nawrocki. Photograph: Wojtek Radwanski/AFP via Getty Images
Govem Mentzen is by far the most popular candidate among younger voters – he took a third of the under-30 vote – and Poland's two presidential front-runners were quick to accept an invitation to his craft brewery and pub in the small town of Torun.
It is filled with political bric-a-brac and agitprop and operates a very public list of banned politicians. Metzen posted his conversations from here on his YouTube channel, where he has more than one million subscribers, simultaneously boosting both his political profile and craft beer brand.
He promised a candidate endorsement days later.
The trip to Torun paid off for Trzaskowski almost immediately when a post-conversation picture of him sharing a beer with Mentzen went viral on social media.
Warsaw's 53-year-old mayor needs all the help he can get – and the real prospect of defeat has set alarm bells ringing with Tusk.
The liberal prime minister has spent his first 18 months back in power battling on two fronts: a president allied with the opposition Law and Jusice (PiS) party who has vetoed judicial reforms and other legislation; and warring coalition allies who disagree on key election promises, including a more liberal
abortion
policy.
'I'm sorry, yes, you all expected us to do more, faster and be stronger,' said Tusk at a weekend rally. 'So I ask you: give us the strength, so that we can change Poland as we promised.'
As PiS-allied candidate Nawrocki is presenting himself as Poland's last defence against a looming Tusk 'coup'.
'I will be the president of your future, I won't allow our future and our childrens' future to be stolen by those who want the destruction of the Polish state,' he said.
Earlier this month Nawrocki was photographed in the White House with
Donald Trump
, who has promised further US military investment in Poland if Nawrocki wins.
Nawrocki has promised a strongly nationalist platform with another
migration
crackdown and presidential pushback against EU plans to achieve climate neutrality by 2050.
'We are for the Polish farmer, the Polish field and Polish bread at the Polish table,' he told a rally on Sunday in Warsaw.
But Nawrocki has struggled to maintain his message in the campaign amid a surge of scandals: over an undeclared second home; alleged links to organised crime and prostitution rings, which he denies; and revelations he participated, in the early 2000s, in organised football hooligan fights. He called them a form of 'noble, masculine combat' and, in the last days of campaigning, began dropping into rally speeches mentions of 'stolen elections'.
That has raised speculation that, if he loses, his PiS backers will challenge Sunday's vote as illegitimate.
Presidential candidate Rafal Trzaskowski is also mayor of Warsaw. Photograph: Sergei Gapon/AFP via Getty Images
Election analysts are predicting a tight result after polls close at 9pm. The first round attracted a record 67 per cent of voters and post-poll analysis revealed the usual Polish divide: Trzaskowski more popular in liberal western Poland and Nawrocki ahead in more conservative eastern regions.
Trzaskowski was also the favourite among Poles voting outside the country, on 37 per cent. However, the Trump-endorsed Nawrocki took 42 per cent of the sizeable US Polish diaspora vote. With such a tight race, polling agencies say the expat vote could swing the final outcome.
After stringing along both presidential candidates, on Wednesday Mentzen decided to endorse neither.
On a YouTube livestream he said he saw 'no reason' to vote for the 'slippery' Trzaskowski, accusing him of breaking promises and disowning failures.
Meanwhile, Nawrocki's life was a 'great cinematic tale', Mentzen said, but after a series of colourful campaign revelations, 'I wouldn't be surprised if there are more such episodes in his past'.
With all eyes on him, Mentzen promised to smash the liberal and national-conservative camps that have dominated Polish politics for two decades. His aim is to go mainstream with Confederation, his party that marries libertarian economics with far-right nationalism.
'I don't know what the future holds but it may turn out that, in two years, it'll be Confederation deciding who governs Poland,' said Mentzen to his YouTube audience. 'I intend to end this duopoly and finally bring change to Poland.'
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Irish Times
14 hours ago
- Irish Times
If our Geraldine can thrive in Trump's Washington, she might be a worthy winner of the race for the Áras
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Irish Times
14 hours ago
- Irish Times
Is it time for the Social Democrats to end Eoin Hayes's purgatory?
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The excruciating exchange went on for just over 22 minutes, focusing initially on whether Hayes had acted hypocritically in holding the shares and being a member of the Social Democrats, which called on the Government to divest its shareholding companies with IDF links. READ MORE It became truly problematic when Hayes said: 'Before I entered politics, I divested from those shares entirely.' This was not true. He sold them in July, having been elected as a councillor in June. Events unravelled rapidly for Hayes and the Social Democrats, who jointly divulged that he sold 7,000 shares for €199,000. He later said his statements were inaccurate but not intentionally so. Clearly this was a serious matter – hypocrisy is bad, but putting inaccurate information out, while being backed up by his colleagues, brought things to another level. He was suspended 'with immediate effect', with no time frame attached to the punishment – meaning he would sit as an Independent, with reduced access to speaking time, committee membership and parliamentary party meetings. Before the Dáil even sat, the Social Democrats were down a TD. A review was commissioned from the party's national executive, which took two months to decide to extend the suspension indefinitely. More than four months later, questions remain unanswered. These include for Hayes, who has maintained a near total public silence on the matter. What, for example, did he mean when he said he sold the shares before entering politics; was it national or local politics? If, in the moment, he meant his Dáil election, why did he allow the impression to form at the press conference that this related to his council election five months earlier? Has he sought to be readmitted to the party? How does he explain the disastrous outing? What happened afterwards? 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It is possible, of course, that some within the party membership object not just to the plinth incident but to the holding and disposal of shares at all – but this is not what he was suspended for. Also, there is the question of whether it's in keeping with natural justice to impose a sanction without end. There have been examples of suspensions before that had no time frame attached when handed down – after Golfgate, for example. But those politicians were back in the party after six months. Mattie McGrath lost the Fianna Fáil whip in 2010 and left the party about seven months later. More recent suspensions, for example for Green Party TDs who voted against the last government, were explicitly time bound when they were imposed. Meanwhile, the party has continued to act as though Hayes is one of their TDs for the purposes of committee chair allocations. 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Irish Times
2 days ago
- Irish Times
Thai PM under growing pressure to quit after leaked phone call
The government of Thai prime minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra was hanging by a thread on Thursday following the withdrawal of a major coalition partner, building pressure on her to resign after just 10 months in power. Political neophyte Paetongtarn, the 38-year-old daughter of influential former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, is facing dwindling popularity, a stuttering economy and a territorial row with Cambodia that has sparked fears of military clashes. The second-biggest partner in the alliance, the Bhumjaithai Party, withdrew from the coalition late on Wednesday, citing damage caused to Thailand's integrity, sovereignty and its army after an embarrassing leak hours earlier of a phone call between the premier and Cambodia's influential former leader, Hun Sen. The United Thai Nation (UTN), Chart Thai Pattana and Democrat parties announced separate meetings on Thursday to decide their next steps. A decision to withdraw by either the Democrats or UTN would leave Ms Paetongtarn with a minority government and in an untenable position. READ MORE The premier has not commented on Bhumjaithai's exit. Ms Paetongtarn was seen entering the government's headquarters on Thursday, with police surrounding the complex in preparation for possible protests against her. Thai stocks fell as much as 2.4 per cent in morning trading to the lowest level since April 9th. In the leaked June 15th call, Ms Paetongtarn is heard pressing former Cambodian leader Hun Sen for a peaceful resolution to the territorial dispute, and urging him not to listen to 'the other side' in Thailand, including an outspoken Thai army general who she said 'just wants to look cool'. [ Travelling solo in Cambodia: Nervous, chafing and covered in mosquito bites - I loved the chaos Opens in new window ] She later told reporters that was a negotiation tactic and there were no issues with the military. Ms Paetongtarn met top security officials on Thursday to discuss the crisis with Cambodia. Flanked by the defence minister, army chief and armed forces commander, she apologised over the leak and called for unity. 'We don't have time for infighting. We have to protect our sovereignty. The government is ready to support the military in all ways,' she told reporters. If Ms Paetongtarn were to resign, parliament must convene to choose a new prime minister to form the next government, from a pool of only five remaining eligible candidates nominated before the 2023 election. Another option would be to dissolve parliament and call an election, a move that could favour the opposition People's Party, the largest force in parliament and the country's most popular party according to opinion polls. The People's Party, the reincarnation of the Move Forward Party that won most votes in the 2023 election but was disbanded last year by a court, said Thailand was paralysed by problems that only a new election could solve. 'The situation yesterday on the leaked phone call is the last straw,' People's Party leader Natthaphong Ruengpanyawut told a press conference. [ 'The scene was like the end of the world': Thailand reels from earthquake Opens in new window ] 'I want the prime minister to dissolve parliament. I think the people want a government that can solve problems for the people, a legitimate government that comes from a democratic process.' Ms Paetongtarn's administration has also been dogged by criticism from opponents about the influence of her divisive tycoon father Thaksin, who holds no official position but often comments on policy and has maintained a high profile since his return from self-exile in 2023. The turmoil and the army's assertiveness over the border dispute with Cambodia have again put the spotlight on Thailand's politically powerful military and its animosity with the Shinawatra family, whose governments it overthrew in 2006 and 2014 coups. The army on Thursday issued a statement affirming its 'commitment to democratic principles' while emphasising Thai unity. 'The chief of army has called upon the Thai people to maintain confidence in the Royal Thai Army's steadfast commitment to constitutional monarchy and ... protecting national sovereignty through established legal frameworks and institutional mechanisms,' it said. – Reuters