1961 Polish parliamentary election explained

Country:Polish People's Republic
Type:parliamentary
Previous Election:1957 Polish parliamentary election
Previous Year:1957
Next Election:1965 Polish parliamentary election
Next Year:1965
Seats For Election:All 460 seats in the Sejm
Election Date:16 April 1961
Image1:Wladyslaw Gomulka.jpg
Leader1:Władysław Gomułka
Party1:Front of National Unity
Seats1:460
Seat Change1: 1
Premier
Posttitle:New Premier
Before Election:Józef Cyrankiewicz
Before Party:Polish United Workers' Party
After Election:Józef Cyrankiewicz
After Party:Polish United Workers' Party

Parliamentary elections were held in Poland on 16 April 1961.[1] They were the third elections to the Sejm, the parliament of the People's Republic of Poland, and fourth in Communist Poland.

Background

The 1961 elections followed the liberalized rules prepared for those in 1957, but compared to the situation five years ago, the Polish society was much more apathetic and disappointed with the government. The elections, as all the others under the communist regimes in Poland, were not free and the results of the 1961 elections are considered to be falsified, again a common occurrence of that time.

The electoral system was very similar to that in East Germany where ostensibly multiple parties were present, but their involvement was tempered by mandatory membership of a "unity list" which was ever loyal to the communist hegemony. In practice, electors only had the choice to approve or disapprove the lists, rather than genuinely get to pick their preferred candidate. There were independents; however, they would get elected only if the majority of voters in a multi-member electorate voted against the official list. Additionally, those who were allowed to register and run as independents had to go through an approval process, which invariably rejected any who were too oppositional. Although there was no blatant falsification like ballot stuffing or overt intimidation of voters who turned out, historiographers of Polish history invariably consider these elections to have been fraudulent - due to the above peculiarities.

Results

The official results were: attendance, 95%. Communist parties' list prepared by Front of National Unity received 89.5% votes. 460 members were elected, 256 from Polish United Workers' Party (PZPR), 117 from United People's Party (ZSL), 39 from Democratic Party (SD), 48 independents (majority, "Social independents" and several, "Catholic independents" from the Znak association).[2] However, as the other parties and "independents" were subordinate to PZPR, its control of the Sejm was total.[2] [3]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. [Dieter Nohlen]
  2. Book: Norman Davies. God's Playground: 1795 to the present. registration. 3 June 2011. May 2005. Columbia University Press. 978-0-231-12819-3. 459.
  3. Book: Andrzej Paczkowski. Jane Cave. The spring will be ours: Poland and the Poles from occupation to freedom. 3 June 2011. 2003. Penn State Press. 978-0-271-02308-3. 229.