Polish Coalition

History

The coalition was first mentioned on 4 February 2019 at a press conference as a union of the Polish People's Party (PSL), the Union of European Democrats (UED) and Modern (N), which supported former Wrocław mayor Rafał Dutkiewicz.[2] In the May 2019 European Parliament election, the PSL, Nowoczesna and UED participated in framing the European Coalition; left-wing parties were also included.

The PSL general council decided to build the Polish Coalition, a centre-right coalition, on 1 June of that year.[3] The desire for a coalition was first declared by the League of Polish Families (LPR)[4][5] and the UED.[6] The PSL also held talks with Kukiz'15, the Right Wing of the Republic and the Nonpartisan Local Government Activists movement, and invited Civic Platform (PO).

The PSL-UED parliamentary coalition changed its name to PSL-Polish Coalition on 4 July 2019, and was joined by former members of PO (Marek Biernacki and Jacek Tomczak) and Novoczesna (Radosław Lubczyk).[7] Two days later, the PSL general council announced that an alliance with PO is a coalition priority. Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz confirmed UED cooperation.[8]

On 23 July, the PSL's Piotr Zgorzelski confirmed that the Alliance of Democrats and Labour Party are part of the coalition and talks with Kukiz'15 and Nonpartisan Local Governments Association were cordial and would end soon.[9][10] A week later, Marek Sawicki confirmed that the Association of Catholic Families had joined the coalition.[11][12]

The Silesians Together party and the Jura-Silesian Association European Home joined the coalition on 5 August 2019.[13] Three days later (after losing several MPs), Kukiz'15 joined the coalition.[14] One member each from Civic Platform and the League of Polish Families (LPR) were also on the PSL list, despite those parties not belonging to the coalition.[15]

In the 2019 parliamentary election, the PSL received 8.55 percent of the vote; this was better than the 2015 election. The coalition has 30 seats in the Sejm: 20 from the PSL, six from Kukiz'15, one from the UED, and three independents. It has three senators: two from the PSL and one from the UED.

2019 election

Name Ideology Position Leader MPs Senators MEPs Sejmiks Entry
Party
Polish People's Party Agrarianism
Christian democracy
Centre to
centre-right
Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz
15 / 460
1 / 100
3 / 51
70 / 552
4 July 2019
Union of European Democrats Centrism
Social liberalism
Centre Elżbieta Bińczycka
4 / 460
0 / 100
0 / 51
1 / 552
4 July 2019
Alliance of Democrats Liberalism
Social liberalism
Centre Paweł Piskorski
0 / 460
0 / 100
0 / 51
0 / 552
23 July 2019
Silesians Together Localism
Silesian autonomism
Centre Leon Swaczyna
0 / 460
0 / 100
0 / 51
0 / 552
5 August 2019
Poland Needs Us Anti-bureaucratism
National liberalism
Centre-right Dariusz Grabowski
0 / 460
0 / 100
0 / 51
0 / 552
27 June 2019
One-PL Direct democracy
Liberalism
Centre-left Włodzimierz Zydorczak
0 / 460
0 / 100
0 / 51
0 / 552
10 September 2019
Other organisations
Kukiz'15 Populism
Direct democracy
Centre-right Paweł Kukiz
16 / 460
0 / 100
0 / 51
0 / 552
8 August 2019
Polish Federation of the Associations of Catholic Families Political Catholicism
Familialism
Centre-right Kazimierz Kapera 30 July 2019
Jurassic-Silesian Association European Home Localism
Progressivism
Centre-left Janusz Żakowski 5 August 2019
Independents
3 / 460
0 / 100
0 / 51
0 / 552
4 July 2019

Ninth Sejm and 10th Senate

Name Ideology Position Leader MPs Senators MEPs Sejmiks
Party
Polish People's Party Agrarianism
Christian democracy
Centre to
centre-right
Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz
20 / 460
2 / 100
3 / 51
70 / 552
Union of European Democrats Centrism
Social liberalism
Centre Elżbieta Bińczycka
1 / 460
1 / 100
0 / 51
1 / 552
Other organisations
Kukiz'15 Populism
Direct democracy
Centre-right Paweł Kukiz
6 / 460
0 / 100
0 / 51
0 / 552
Fair Play Country Conservative liberalism
Minarchism
Centre-right Jolanta Milas
0 / 460
0 / 100
0 / 51
0 / 552
Independents
3 / 460
0 / 100
0 / 51
0 / 552

References

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