Parliamentary elections in Poland will be held on 15 October, Poland’s President Andrzej Duda has decided. The announcement of the election marks the formal start of the election campaign.

“Take part in the elections!!!,” wrote Duda on social media announcing his decision. “The future of Poland is everyone’s matter! Use your rights!”

In Poland, the parliamentary elections take place every four years but it is the prerogative of the president to decide on the exact date of the elections.

In the election, the national-conservative Law and Justice (PiS) party, which has been in power since 2015, will compete for an unprecedented third consecutive term in what polls indicate will be a very close race.

The other main forces competing are the centrist Civic Coalition (KO), the far-right Confederation (Konfederacja), the Third Way (Trzecia Droga) alliance – which includes the centre-right Poland 2050 (Polska 2050) and the agrarian Polish People’s Party (PSL) – and The Left (Lewica).

The polls show that in July, PiS enjoyed the highest support, with 33.7% of respondents declaring their willingness to vote for them on average.

Despite this, however, the party may struggle to form an independent majority. According to estimates by the polls aggregation website ewybory.pl, with such support, the party would only win 183 seats in the 460-member lower house of the Polish parliament, the Sejm. At least 231 seats are needed to govern alone.

A bloc of opposition parties that have traditionally worked together on many issues in recent years, namely KO, the Third Way and the Left, also might fail to secure enough seats to create a coalition government. The parties, which in July had average support of 29.0%, 9.6% and 8.7% respectively, are currently on track to win an estimated 222 seats, 9 short of what they need to take the power over.

Many commentators, therefore, point to the Confederation, which has risen strongly in the polls in recent months to average support of 12.6%, as a potential kingmaker during this year’s elections.

Monthly polling averages for Poland’s main political groups (via ewybory.eu)

The radical right-wing Confederation is a political conglomerate mainly comprising of free-market economic libertarians, previously centered around the divisive and eccentric figure of Janusz Korwin-Mikke, and radical nationalists from the National Movement (RN) grouping.

Confederation has achieved success in the polls after shifting its focus away from nationalist rhetoric on migration and the war in Ukraine and instead emphasising its free-market policies.

Commentators have for many weeks pointed to 15 October as the most likely date for the elections, indicating that it would fall just a day before the yearly celebrations of Pope John Paul II, who is a national hero to many.

The ruling party also plans to hold a referendum on the EU’s proposed migration pact on the same day, which analysts see as a tactic to mobilise its voters.


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Main image credit: Prezydent.pl

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