logo
#

Latest news with #CivicCoalition

Polish liberal candidate's team lodge protest over presidential election
Polish liberal candidate's team lodge protest over presidential election

Yahoo

time17-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Polish liberal candidate's team lodge protest over presidential election

WARSAW (Reuters) -The campaign team of the defeated candidate in Poland's presidential election lodged a protest over alleged voting irregularities, its head said late on Monday, part of a wave of complaints from supporters of liberal Rafal Trzaskowski. Trzaskowski, from the ruling Civic Coalition (KO), was narrowly defeated by nationalist Karol Nawrocki in the June 1 second round, with the nationalist candidate backed by the opposition Law and Justice (PiS) party getting 50.89% of the vote. Media reported irregularities in the second round and the Supreme Court has ordered a recount in 13 commissions, but this won't affect the final result materially. "In a democratic electoral process, every voter's vote must be guaranteed due respect by state institutions. The election protest of (Trzaskowski's) campaign representative was sent to the Supreme Court," the chief of Trzaskowski's campaign, Wiola Paprocka, wrote on X late on Monday. She gave no details of the wording of the protest. Another member of the Trzaskowski campaign team, Deputy Defence Minister Cezary Tomczyk said on Saturday he was filing a protest privately, pointing to an unusual increase in spoiled or blank ballots in areas where Trzaskowski won in the first round. He said that according to a model from UCE Research, there were 800 polling stations where Nawrocki had a "suspiciously high" score, and referred to irregularities in polling stations where a recount has already been ordered. The PiS party says that Trzaskowski's supporters are trying to undermine Poles' faith in the democratic process. Current president and PiS ally Andrzej Duda said on June 9 that "liberal-leftists, want to... take away our freedom of choice." Poles had until Monday to lodge protests with the Supreme Court, and the court has around two weeks to hear them. The Polish electoral commission on Monday confirmed the result of the election but said that in the second round, there were "incidents that could have affected the outcome of the vote." It said it would leave an assessment of these incidents to the Supreme Court. A Supreme Court spokesperson said on Monday that it had already registered over 3,000 protests and expected many more.

Polish liberal candidate's team lodge protest over presidential election
Polish liberal candidate's team lodge protest over presidential election

The Star

time17-06-2025

  • Politics
  • The Star

Polish liberal candidate's team lodge protest over presidential election

FILE PHOTO: Civic Coalition presidential candidate, Warsaw Mayor Rafal Trzaskowski flashes the victory sign during the election evening, in Warsaw, Poland, June 1, 2025. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel/File Photo WARSAW (Reuters) -The campaign team of the defeated candidate in Poland's presidential election lodged a protest over alleged voting irregularities, its head said late on Monday, part of a wave of complaints from supporters of liberal Rafal Trzaskowski. Trzaskowski, from the ruling Civic Coalition (KO), was narrowly defeated by nationalist Karol Nawrocki in the June 1 second round, with the nationalist candidate backed by the opposition Law and Justice (PiS) party getting 50.89% of the vote. Media reported irregularities in the second round and the Supreme Court has ordered a recount in 13 commissions, but this won't affect the final result materially. "In a democratic electoral process, every voter's vote must be guaranteed due respect by state institutions. The election protest of (Trzaskowski's) campaign representative was sent to the Supreme Court," the chief of Trzaskowski's campaign, Wiola Paprocka, wrote on X late on Monday. She gave no details of the wording of the protest. Another member of the Trzaskowski campaign team, Deputy Defence Minister Cezary Tomczyk said on Saturday he was filing a protest privately, pointing to an unusual increase in spoiled or blank ballots in areas where Trzaskowski won in the first round. He said that according to a model from UCE Research, there were 800 polling stations where Nawrocki had a "suspiciously high" score, and referred to irregularities in polling stations where a recount has already been ordered. The PiS party says that Trzaskowski's supporters are trying to undermine Poles' faith in the democratic process. Current president and PiS ally Andrzej Duda said on June 9 that "liberal-leftists, want to... take away our freedom of choice." Poles had until Monday to lodge protests with the Supreme Court, and the court has around two weeks to hear them. The Polish electoral commission on Monday confirmed the result of the election but said that in the second round, there were "incidents that could have affected the outcome of the vote." It said it would leave an assessment of these incidents to the Supreme Court. A Supreme Court spokesperson said on Monday that it had already registered over 3,000 protests and expected many more. (Reporting by Anna Wlodarczak-Semczuk; Editing by Alan Charlish and Bernadette Baum)

Polish liberal candidate's team lodge protest over presidential election
Polish liberal candidate's team lodge protest over presidential election

Reuters

time17-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Reuters

Polish liberal candidate's team lodge protest over presidential election

WARSAW, June 17 (Reuters) - The campaign team of the defeated candidate in Poland's presidential election lodged a protest over alleged voting irregularities, its head said late on Monday, part of a wave of complaints from supporters of liberal Rafal Trzaskowski. Trzaskowski, from the ruling Civic Coalition (KO), was narrowly defeated by nationalist Karol Nawrocki in the June 1 second round, with the nationalist candidate backed by the opposition Law and Justice (PiS) party getting 50.89% of the vote. Media reported irregularities in the second round and the Supreme Court has ordered a recount in 13 commissions, but this won't affect the final result materially. "In a democratic electoral process, every voter's vote must be guaranteed due respect by state institutions. The election protest of (Trzaskowski's) campaign representative was sent to the Supreme Court," the chief of Trzaskowski's campaign, Wiola Paprocka, wrote on X late on Monday. She gave no details of the wording of the protest. Another member of the Trzaskowski campaign team, Deputy Defence Minister Cezary Tomczyk said on Saturday he was filing a protest privately, pointing to an unusual increase in spoiled or blank ballots in areas where Trzaskowski won in the first round. He said that according to a model from UCE Research, there were 800 polling stations where Nawrocki had a "suspiciously high" score, and referred to irregularities in polling stations where a recount has already been ordered. The PiS party says that Trzaskowski's supporters are trying to undermine Poles' faith in the democratic process. Current president and PiS ally Andrzej Duda said on June 9 that "liberal-leftists, want to... take away our freedom of choice." Poles had until Monday to lodge protests with the Supreme Court, and the court has around two weeks to hear them. The Polish electoral commission on Monday confirmed the result of the election but said that in the second round, there were "incidents that could have affected the outcome of the vote." It said it would leave an assessment of these incidents to the Supreme Court. A Supreme Court spokesperson said on Monday that it had already registered over 3,000 protests and expected many more.

Polish liberal candidate's team lodge protest over presidential election
Polish liberal candidate's team lodge protest over presidential election

Straits Times

time17-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Straits Times

Polish liberal candidate's team lodge protest over presidential election

WARSAW - The campaign team of the defeated candidate in Poland's presidential election lodged a protest over alleged voting irregularities, its head said late on Monday, part of a wave of complaints from supporters of liberal Rafal Trzaskowski. Trzaskowski, from the ruling Civic Coalition (KO), was narrowly defeated by nationalist Karol Nawrocki in the June 1 second round, with the nationalist candidate backed by the opposition Law and Justice (PiS) party getting 50.89% of the vote. Media reported irregularities in the second round and the Supreme Court has ordered a recount in 13 commissions, but this won't affect the final result materially. "In a democratic electoral process, every voter's vote must be guaranteed due respect by state institutions. The election protest of (Trzaskowski's) campaign representative was sent to the Supreme Court," the chief of Trzaskowski's campaign, Wiola Paprocka, wrote on X late on Monday. She gave no details of the wording of the protest. Another member of the Trzaskowski campaign team, Deputy Defence Minister Cezary Tomczyk said on Saturday he was filing a protest privately, pointing to an unusual increase in spoiled or blank ballots in areas where Trzaskowski won in the first round. He said that according to a model from UCE Research, there were 800 polling stations where Nawrocki had a "suspiciously high" score, and referred to irregularities in polling stations where a recount has already been ordered. The PiS party says that Trzaskowski's supporters are trying to undermine Poles' faith in the democratic process. Current president and PiS ally Andrzej Duda said on June 9 that "liberal-leftists, want to... take away our freedom of choice." Poles had until Monday to lodge protests with the Supreme Court, and the court has around two weeks to hear them. The Polish electoral commission on Monday confirmed the result of the election but said that in the second round, there were "incidents that could have affected the outcome of the vote." It said it would leave an assessment of these incidents to the Supreme Court. A Supreme Court spokesperson said on Monday that it had already registered over 3,000 protests and expected many more. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Polish PM Tusk survives parliament vote of confidence
Polish PM Tusk survives parliament vote of confidence

West Australian

time11-06-2025

  • Politics
  • West Australian

Polish PM Tusk survives parliament vote of confidence

Poland's coalition government has won a vote of confidence, an outcome that Prime Minister Donald Tusk hopes will give his cabinet new momentum after it was shaken by a setback in the presidential election. Rafal Trzaskowski from Tusk's Civic Coalition was defeated by conservative historian Karol Nawrocki in the June 1 runoff vote, unleashing recriminations from the smaller partners in the coalition government and casting doubt over the administration's future when a hostile president is able to wield veto powers. MPs voted 243-210 in favour of the government. There were no abstentions. Tusk's broad coalition has 242 MPs in the 460-seat lower house, or Sejm, meaning it was always likely to survive Wednesday's vote of confidence. "I needed this vote because we were seeing ... speculation that this government will not make it, that Tusk may be taken down, and you cannot work under such conditions," Tusk said. However, he added that he still needed to regain voters' confidence: "We need to do much more." In a debate ahead of the vote, Tusk listed higher defence spending and a cut in visa issuance for migrants as major achievements since he took power in December 2023, replacing the nationalist Law and Justice party (PiS), which backs Nawrocki. Tusk also said his government would continue its efforts to roll back judicial reforms implemented by PiS that the European Union says undermine the courts' independence. Poland's outgoing president, Andrzej Duda, also a PiS ally, has so far blocked the government's attempts to reverse the judicial reforms. Analysts say many Polish voters are disillusioned with the government's failure to deliver on promises including reforming the judiciary and raising the threshold at which Poles start paying taxes. In an interview published on Wednesday, president-elect Nawrocki told Dziennik Gazeta Prawna daily that he would sign a law to raise the tax-allowance threshold and would even submit such a bill himself if the government did not. In an apparent swipe at the government's failure to implement the 100 promises it made for its first 100 days, Nawrocki said he would "do (them) for Donald Tusk. Isn't that conciliatory?". The government had hoped for a Trzaskowski victory in the presidential election that would have given it the freedom to fully implement its agenda. Facing questions about his leadership even from normally sympathetic media outlets, Tusk framed the vote of confidence as a chance to relaunch his 18-month-old government. "I would like you to know that for the entire ... coalition, this is to be a day of new momentum and I am convinced that you will live up to this task," he told his government ahead of Wednesday's vote. Tusk has said there will soon be a government reshuffle, probably in July. with AP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store