Civic Coalition (Poland) Explained

Civic Coalition
Native Name:Koalicja Obywatelska
Abbreviation:KO
Leader1 Title:Leaders
Foundation:7 March 2018
Headquarters:ul. Wiejska 12a,
00-490 Warsaw
Affiliation1 Title:Members
Position:Big tent
Seats1 Title:Sejm
Seats2 Title:Senate
Seats3 Title:European Parliament
Seats4 Title:Regional assemblies
Seats5 Title:Voivodes
Seats6 Title:Voivodeship Marshals
Seats7 Title:City Presidents
Seats8 Title:Mayors
Seats9 Title:Wójts
Seats10 Title:Powiat Councils
Seats11 Title:Gmina Councils
Country:Poland

The Civic Coalition (Polish: Koalicja Obywatelska, KO) is a catch-all political alliance currently ruling in Poland. The alliance was formed around Civic Platform in opposition to the then-ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party.

History

The Civic Coalition was originally created by the Civic Platform and Modern parties for 2018 local elections.[1] In June 2019, it was announced that the Civic Coalition would be slated to participate in the 2019 Polish parliamentary election and Civic Platform and Modern will form a joint parliamentary club.[2] The Greens announced at the end of July 2019 that they will participate in the elections as part of the Coalition.[3] In August 2019, the Silesian Autonomy Movement and other member organisations of the Silesian Electoral Agreement joined the Coalition.[4]

2018 local elections and present

In the 2018 local elections, the Civic Coalition received 26.97% of votes (second place after Law and Justice), winning 194 seats. In 8 voivodeships, it obtained the best result, and in the Pomerania the majority of seats. The coalition fared worse in the powiat and mayoral election. In the first round of 11 candidates of the Civic Coalition won elections for mayors of cities (including Rafał Trzaskowski in Warsaw). In addition, 15 candidates of the Civic Coalition went through to the second round, of which 8 were elected. Candidates of Civic Coalition were elected presidents of 19 cities, while it was placed second to the national-conservative Law and Justice in four.[5]

The committee has shown stronger electoral performances in large cities, such as, Warsaw, Poznań, Gdańsk, Wrocław, Łódź, and Kraków. Better than average results were achieved in West and North Poland (Recovered Territories). In the Opole Voivodeship, Civic Coalition received high support among the German minority. However, it has weaker support in the villages and in the conservative eastern Poland.[6]

In the 2019 parliamentary elections, the Coalition received most of its votes in major cities (as in 2018 local elections) and areas surrounding them. For the 2019 election, the coalition entered an agreement with Silesian Regional Party and Silesian Autonomy Movement, and activists and politicians associated with these Silesian parties were included on the Civic Coalition's electoral lists.[7] The electoral pact between the Civic Coalition and Silesian regionalists declared three demands – the strengthening of regional government, an increase in the share of tax revenues allocated to local governments, and the recognition of Silesian language as a regional language.[8]

Civic Platform already cooperated with Silesian Autonomy Movement on local level – in 2015, both parties entered a local coalition in the Silesian Voivodeship Sejmik.[9] In March 2023, Civic Coalition again pledged to recognize Silesian as a regional language.[10]

After exit polls for the 2023 parliamentary elections showed KO having taken a strong enough second place finish to oust the ruling Law and Justice party, KO leader Donald Tusk said, "I have been a politician for many years. I'm an athlete. Never in my life have I been so happy about taking seemingly second place. Poland won. Democracy has won."[11]

Ideology

The Civic Coalition is a catch-all coalition, that is made up of political parties that occupy political positions from the centre-left to the centre-right.[12] [13] Media and academics have also described the coalition as centre-left, centrist, and centre-right. It was described as centre-right by The Guardian,[14] Euractiv,[15] EUobserver,[16] The Telegraph,[17] Heinrich Böll Foundation,[18] and the Financial Times[19] during the 2023 Polish parliamentary election. The coalition's positions on social issues range from progressivism to Christian democracy. It is mainly oriented towards the principles of liberal conservatism and liberalism, and it aims to protect liberal democracy in Poland.[20] The coalition was also described as anti-immigration, mostly because of the rhetoric of its dominating party, centre-right Civic Platform. The coalition also supports Poland's membership in the European Union and NATO.[21]

Composition

NameIdeologyPositionEuropean affiliationLeader(s)MPsSenatorsMEPsSejmiks
Civic PlatformCentre to centre-rightEPPDonald Tusk
ModernCentre to centre-leftALDEAdam Szłapka
Polish InitiativeCentre-left to left-wingBarbara Nowacka
The GreensGreen politicsEGP
AGROuniaMichał Kołodziejczak
Yes! For PolandRegionalismCentre-leftJacek Karnowski
Independents

Supported by

NameIdeologyPositionEuropean affiliationLeader(s)MPsSenatorsMEPsSejmiks
League of Polish FamiliesEuropean Christian Political MovementWitold Bałażak
Good MovementPaweł Szramka
Democratic Left AssociationJerzy Teichert
Silesian Regional PartyIlona Kanclerz
Silesian Autonomy MovementJerzy Gorzelik

Electoral performance

Sejm

YearLeaderPopular vote% of voteSeatsSeat changeGovernment
2019Grzegorz Schetyna5,060,355 27.4 New
2023Donald Tusk6,629,40230.7 23

Senate

YearPopular vote% of voteSeatsSeat changeMajorityLeader
20196,490,306 35.66 17Grzegorz Schetyna
20236,187,29528.91 2Donald Tusk

European Parliament

YearPopular vote% of voteSeatsSeat change
20195,249,935 38.47 5
As part of the European Coalition coalition, which won 22 seats in total.
20244,359,443 37.06 (#1)7

2024 local

VoivodeshipSeatsGovernance
Lower SilesianCoalition
Kuyavian-PomeranianCoalition
LublinOpposition
LubuszCoalition
ŁódźCoalition
Lesser PolandOpposition
MasovianCoalition
OpoleCoalition
SubcarpathianOpposition
PodlaskieCoalition
PomeranianMajority
SilesianCoalition
ŚwiętokrzyskieOpposition
Warmian-MasurianCoalition
Greater PolandCoalition
West PomeranianCoalition
All seats

2018 local

VoivodeshipSeatsGovernance
Lower SilesianOpposition (2018-2024)
Coalition (2024-)
Kuyavian-PomeranianCoalition
LublinOpposition
LubuszCoalition
ŁódźOpposition
Lesser PolandOpposition
MasovianCoalition
OpoleCoalition
SubcarpathianOpposition
PodlaskieOpposition
PomeranianCoalition
SilesianOpposition (2018-2022)
Coalition (2022-)
ŚwiętokrzyskieOpposition (2018-2023)
Coalition (2023-)
Warmian-MasurianCoalition
Greater PolandCoalition
West PomeranianCoalition
All seats

See also

Notes and references

References

Notes and References

  1. News: PO i Nowoczesna razem do wyborów. Schetyna i Lubnauer podpisali porozumienie. 2018-03-07. WPROST.pl. 2018-12-03. pl-PL.
  2. News: PO i Nowoczesna połączą siły na wybory parlamentarne. 2019-06-08. Forsal.pl. 2019-07-30. pl-PL.
  3. News: Zieloni oficjalnie potwierdzili start w wyborach w ramach Koalicji Obywatelskiej. 2019-07-30. Polska Agencja Prasowa. 2019-07-30. pl-PL.
  4. News: Śląscy autonomiści dołączają do Koalicji Obywatelskiej. 2019-08-08. Wyborcza.pl. 2019-08-10. pl-PL.
  5. Web site: Wybory samorządowe 2018. 2018-12-03. wybory2018.pkw.gov.pl.
  6. News: Imperial borders still shape politics in Poland and Romania. en. The Economist. 2018-12-03.
  7. Web site: Ruch Autonomii Śląska na listach Koalicji Obywatelskiej . 9 August 2019 . Paweł Pawlik . onet.pl . pl.
  8. Web site: Koalicja Obywatelska podpisała Pakt dla Śląska. Większe kompetencje i więcej pieniędzy dla regionu . 25 August 2019 . Przemysław Jedlecki . wyborcza.pl . pl.
  9. Web site: Koalicja Obywatelska wpadła w Kałużę: wybory do sejmiku województwa śląskiego . Mateusz Marmola . 10.34616/129950 . 21 June 2023 . University of Silesia . 198 . pl.
  10. Web site: Tusk: język śląski będzie uznany za język regionalny . 19 March 2023 . pl . pap.pl . Krzysztof Konopka . Mateusz Mikowski.
  11. News: ABC News . Polish opposition leader Tusk declares win after exit poll shows ruling conservatives lose majority . 15 October 2023 . 15 October 2023 . en.
  12. Web site: Poland. live. 2021-12-23 . Center for Strategic & International Studies. en. https://web.archive.org/web/20201223232740/https://www.csis.org/programs/european-election-watch/2019-elections/poland . 23 December 2020 .
  13. Web site: 2019-10-12. 2019 election for Poland's parliament: What you need to know. 2021-12-23. The Krakow Post. en-US.
  14. Web site: All eyes in Europe are focused on Poland's divisive election fight. But it's not a pretty sight . Tisdall . Simon . 30 September 2023 . The Guardian.
  15. Web site: Poles at the Polls: A pact against PiS? . Krzysztoszek . Aleksandra . 14 April 2023 . euractiv.com.
  16. Web site: Kaczynski decries 'German' takeover of Polish parliament . Bobiński . Krszysztof . 13 November 2023 . euobserver.com.
  17. Web site: Poland faces bitter battle as Donald Tusk's opposition gains edge in election . Day . Matthew . 16 October 2023 . The Daily Telegraph.
  18. Web site: October elections in Poland . 27 September 2023 . Polakowski . Michał . Joanna Maria . Stolarek . boell.org.
  19. Web site: Kaczynski returns to frontline Polish politics in cabinet shake-up . James . Shotter . 30 September 2023 . Financial Times.
  20. Web site: Poland. live. 2021-12-23 . Center for Strategic & International Studies. en. https://web.archive.org/web/20201223232740/https://www.csis.org/programs/european-election-watch/2019-elections/poland . 23 December 2020 .
  21. Web site: 2019-10-12. 2019 election for Poland's parliament: What you need to know. 2021-12-23. The Krakow Post. en-US.