Karol Nawrocki, Poland’s newly elected president, is anticipated to dam Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s pro-EU reform agenda and supply recent impetus to rightwing populists throughout the continent.
In a slender run-off victory on Sunday, Nawrocki — a historian and political newcomer representing the nationalist Regulation and Justice (PiS) social gathering — defeated Warsaw mayor Rafał Trzaskowski, the candidate backed by Tusk’s centre-right Civic Coalition, with a vote margin of lower than 2 per cent.
Nawrocki’s win is prone to exacerbate tensions between the presidency and authorities, scuppering a judicial overhaul that Tusk had pledged in 2023 in return for Brussels releasing billions of EU funds that have been frozen throughout a rule of regulation dispute with the earlier PiS authorities.
Nawrocki, an newbie boxer and self-confessed soccer hooligan from Gdańsk who has by no means held elected workplace, is anticipated to be extra combative than outgoing President Andrzej Duda, one other PiS nominee who continuously used his veto rights to dam Tusk’s payments.
“He will probably be a lot worse for Tusk than Duda,” stated Adam Leszczyński, director of the Gabriel Narutowicz Institute of Political Thought, a government-affiliated think-tank.
“He’s far more excessive in his views and he’s coming into this presidency with numerous resentment, after actually getting a really private beating from Tusk and his allies throughout the marketing campaign.”
Nawrocki’s win is an enormous defeat for Tusk, whose personal return to energy lower than two years in the past was hailed by many as a breakthrough that might restore Warsaw’s standing within the EU at a time when Russia was waging the biggest armed battle on European soil for the reason that second world warfare.
However the presidential race has revealed how Tusk’s premiership has didn’t paper over divisions in a extremely polarised society, as radical candidates on each ends of the political spectrum fared higher than anticipated within the first spherical, endorsed particularly by youthful voters.
The Polish vote was additionally a uncommon victory for the Maga motion overseas, after rightwing politicians emulating US President Donald Trump have been defeated in elections in Canada, Australia and most not too long ago Romania. It got here earlier than different key votes in central Europe, with Eurosceptic billionaire Andrej Babiš hoping to return as Czech prime minister this autumn, in addition to Hungary’s Viktor Orbán, Europe’s longest-serving prime minister, who’s each a Trump and Russia ally and is looking for re-election subsequent yr.
“You now have contained in the EU one other chief decided to sabotage many issues,” stated Leszczyński. “Nawrocki shares Orbán’s mindset, however with extra aggression and fewer [negotiation] abilities.”
Whereas Nawrocki had solely briefly met Trump within the run-up to the election, a few of the US president’s high officers have been dispatched to Poland for a Conservative Political Motion Convention there final week.

US homeland safety secretary Kristi Noem endorsed Nawrocki at that convention, calling on Poles to “elect the appropriate chief” and describing his rival Trzaskowski as “an absolute practice wreck”.
“You may be the leaders that may flip Europe again to conservative values,” Noem stated.
Sunday’s consequence can also be a private victory for Jarosław Kaczyński, the 75-year-old PiS founder and long-standing Tusk nemesis who handpicked Nawrocki, 42, a comparatively unknown determine who led Poland’s Institute of Nationwide Remembrance.
Nawrocki is ready to supply “a extra radical and uncompromising presidency than Duda’s, presumably resulting in an much more far-right authorities . . . than PiS ever was”, stated Piotr Buras, head of the Warsaw bureau of the European Council on International Relations.
Sunday’s consequence confirmed that “the far-right, anti-EU, pro-Trump forces are stickier and extra entrenched than many observers assumed”, stated Matt Dallek, a political historian at George Washington College.
“The battle pitting liberal internationalists in opposition to pro-Trump, pro-Orbán populists is being joined, and Poland is likely one of the extra necessary battlegrounds in what is probably going a generational wrestle inside the world’s main democracies.”
Nawrocki’s marketing campaign gained momentum after he sealed a pact with Sławomir Mentzen of the far-right Confederation social gathering, who received practically 15 per cent of votes within the first spherical. Their settlement included pledges to oppose tax will increase and defend gun possession rights — priorities designed to attraction to Confederation’s libertarian base.
Nawrocki’s victory got here regardless of fierce criticism for a sequence of non-public scandals and alleged ties to criminals — accusations he denied. Kaczyński stated on Sunday that his candidate had efficiently navigated “a Niagara of lies”.
Against this, Trzaskowski, a former authorities minister and member of the European parliament, was seen as an skilled candidate who had solely narrowly misplaced to Duda within the presidential election in 2020.
However Trzaskowski struggled to flee Tusk’s shadow, notably over his authorities’s failure to enact promised reforms, together with reversing a near-total ban on abortion that was launched below PiS and maintained partly due to disagreements inside Tusk’s coalition, which incorporates some socially conservative lawmakers.
Tusk acknowledged his authorities’s shortcomings and issued a uncommon apology within the ultimate mass rally in Warsaw every week earlier than the run-off — a gesture analysts say got here too late.
Opinion polls had proven Trzaskowski within the lead all through the marketing campaign, however Nawrocki caught up together with his rival, narrowing the hole to simply two share factors within the first spherical. Sunday’s upset victory is ready to embolden voices inside PiS pushing for early parliamentary elections and will create recent tensions inside Tusk’s unwieldy ruling coalition.
Earlier than the run-off, Tusk dominated out snap elections. However Dorota Piontek, a political scientist at Adam Mickiewicz College in Poznań, stated there would now in all probability be “a play for early elections and the takeover of energy by PiS and Confederation, which suggests a battle with the EU and a weakening of Poland’s place”.