April 23, 2020
By Marcin Goclowski
WARSAW (Reuters) – Polish President Andrzej Duda, an ally of the
ruling nationalists, may be re-elected next month by a landslide, an
opinion poll showed on Thursday, as the opposition renewed calls for a
delay to the vote due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Scheduled for May 10, the election has been the subject of heated
political debate in Poland, with critics accusing the Law and Justice
(PiS) government of putting political gain ahead of public health in
insisting the vote be held as scheduled.
PiS says a postal ballot, which it is trying to organise instead of
using polling stations, will ensure the election can be held safely,
even as its officials say the pandemic has yet to peak in Poland.
Poland has reported 10,346 cases of the coronavirus and 435 deaths.
The opinion poll, conducted on April 2-12 for the European Council
for Foreign Relations think tank and published by the Gazeta Wyborcza
daily, showed Duda capturing 65% of the vote. None of the runners-up
would reach double digits, it showed.
An ECFR expert said Duda’s sharp gains in the poll – his support
hovered around 40% before the pandemic – suggested much of the centrist
and leftist electorate which opposes him was unlikely to participate in
the election.
“This is their opposition to the very idea of organizing an election at this time,” Pawel Zerka, a policy fellow at ECFR said.
The poll showed nearly three-quarters of Poles opposed a May
presidential election, with only 29% saying they would vote. Election
turnout came to 55% when Duda first won the presidency in 2015.
Conversely, the poll showed Duda winning only 39% of votes if the
election were held later, after the pandemic subsides, forcing him to
compete in a second round two weeks later. Opinion polls conducted
before the election showed Duda would struggle to win a runoff.
It is a high-stake vote for PiS, because the party needs the
president’s approval to further its conservative agenda and judicial
reforms, which the European Union says subvert the rule of law.
It has shrugged off opposition calls to postpone the ballot for a
year, arguing that it is safeguarding democratic procedures. But it has
also given tentative support to an alternative proposal from a junior
member of its parliamentary coalition that would give Duda two more
years in power via a constitutional amendment.
It is still unclear when the election will take place. Parliament has
yet to give its clearance to the PiS plan to vote by mail, which postal
unions oppose on the grounds of safety.
Underscoring the political rifts, PiS has said mail-in ballots are
already being printed, despite the opposition saying that it is illegal
to do this without parliament first approving the procedure.
https://www.oann.com/poland-president-may-win-landslide-as-opposition-voters-stay-away-poll/