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WARSAW: Presidential candidate, Warsaw's Mayor and member of ruling centrist Civic Coalition party Rafal Trzaskowski (right) votes at a polling station in Warsaw on May 18, 2025.-- AFP
WARSAW: Presidential candidate, Warsaw's Mayor and member of ruling centrist Civic Coalition party Rafal Trzaskowski (right) votes at a polling station in Warsaw on May 18, 2025.-- AFP

Poland votes in tight election as Europe watches

WARSAW: Poland voted on Sunday in a tight presidential election that will be decisive for the future of the country’s pro-EU government as well as for abortion rights.

Centrist Warsaw mayor Rafal Trzaskowski is expected to win 30 percent of the vote, according to opinion polls, ahead of nationalist historian Karol Nawrocki on 25 percent. That would put both through to a run-off on June 1 at a fraught moment for Europe. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine drags on, far-right populists continue to make electoral gains and ties with Washington are under strain.

Voting ended at 9 pm (1900 GMT). The final official results of the contest, in which 13 candidates are running, are expected on Monday.

“These are very important elections,” voter Marcin Woloszynski, a 42-year-old economist, told AFP. “They offer two diametrically opposed visions of Poland... a democratic, European, open, confident, honest Poland on one side, and the opposite on the other,” he said after casting his ballot in Warsaw, where support for Trzaskowski is particularly high. Ever since Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s coalition came to power in 2023, key government initiatives have been blocked by vetoes from nationalist President Andrzej Duda.

The electoral campaign in Poland — a member of both the European Union and NATO — has largely revolved around foreign policy, showcasing a clash of philosophies over Poland’s engagement with the EU and the United States. But social issues have also played a major part.

Trzaskowski, 53, has promised to support abortion and LGBTQ rights. “These elections are about rights for women and minorities, rights for children and animals,” said Anna Rusztynska-Wolska, a 69-year-old doctor, after voting. “They are about security in the European Union and in the world because the more Poland is a country that respects the rule of law (and is) rich and well-managed, the better it will be for all of us,” she said.

The former ruling Law and Justice party (PiS), which backs Nawrocki, was frequently at odds with Poland’s Western allies and EU institutions in Brussels over rule-of-law concerns.

Nawrocki, 42, is an admirer of US President Donald Trump. He said Trump told him: “You will win” when they met at the White House earlier this month. The key to the election could be whether supporters of Slawomir Mentzen, a far-right candidate polling in third position with around 12 percent, cast their ballots for Nawrocki in the second round.

Mentzen is a eurosceptic libertarian staunchly opposed to abortion and migrants. He has accused the country’s one million Ukrainian refugees of taking advantage of Poland. — AFP

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