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The Polish vote in a presidential election in Cliffhanger on Sunday, which will determine whether Warsaw is still strong for the European Union and the ally of Ukraine or if the Maga President Donald Trump’s movement achieved a rare victory outside the United States.
The choice between the mayor of Warsaw, the European Union, Rafa Tizzusky, who was approved by the government, and Lemon Harderr Carroll Noruki, with the support of the opposition and justice law party. The couple was conducting opinion and censorship polls heading to repeat, after Trzaskowski won a little difference in the first round of voting last month.
Voting is widely seen as a right -wing Maga Popular Movement, who supported Noruki and sent a senior Trump administration official to a gathering just days before the vote.
On Tuesday, US Internal Security Security Security called on the Polish to “elect the appropriate leader” and described Tricaskowski as “a wreckage of an absolute train.”
“The leaders who will return to Europe will return to conservative values,” Nayyu said at the conservative political work conference held in Jasuka near the Polish -Polish border.
The Nawrocki Victory would manage the tide over a series of Maga losses in Canada, Australia and Romania and encourage other European leaders and Ukraine-billionaire billionaire Andrig Babi, who hope to return to the prime minister after the elections in the fall, and the VikTor Orbán professional prime minister who is looking to re-elect them.
Prime Minister Donald Tusk, who apologized for the shortcomings of his government.
Tusk warned that the Noroki presidency could be able to determine his long -term reforms that were banned by the outgoing president, Doda, who is also a candidate for PIS. These reforms include a judicial reform process carried out by the previous PIS government, which led to a freezing PolandEuropean Union funds. The European Commission released billions of euros when Task returned to power in 2023, but the reforms are still due.
“Noroki’s victory can be a bleeding in the retreat of Poland to local political turmoil and the main tasks is to pave the way for PIS’s return to power,” said Pyoter Bouras, head of the Warsaw office at the European Council for Foreign Relations.
Bouras added: “This will undermine the legitimacy of the Tusk government and reduce its room for maneuver, which would significantly weaken the position of the Polish Prime Minister.”
Regardless of Sunday’s results, analysts say the campaign has put deep naked lines through Polish society and the increasing anger of the political establishment, including opposition PIS.
In the first round of the vote, many of the younger columns supported the extremist candidates from both sides of the political spectrum, in a protest against Tusk and his long -term political speculation, Jarosław Kaczyński, who founded PIS in 2001.
Winning TRZASKOWSKI would strengthen the fragile TUSK coalition and provide a mandate to accelerate the stalled reforms. But the Prime Minister will remain under pressure for delivery.
Before voting on the edge of Sunday’s knife, Tusk insisted that even if Noruki became president, he will not invite the sudden parliamentary elections before the regular elections scheduled for 2027.
Doruta Punitek, a political scientist at Adam Mikiic University in Boznan, said that the presidency of Tizskoski will maintain “the current path of the government in local and foreign policy, but this does not mean the end of polarization and that there will be no other battle in 2027.”
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