Polish prime minister Donald Tusk faces vote of confidence in parliament – Europe live

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Morning opening: Embattled Tusk seeks fresh start

Jakub Krupa

Jakub Krupa

Polish prime minister Donald Tusk will face a vote of confidence in parliament this afternoon as he seeks to bounce back from his party’s presidential election defeat two weeks ago.

Polish prime minister Donald Tusk attends the government meeting at the Chancellery of the Prime Minister in Warsaw, Poland.
Polish prime minister Donald Tusk attends the government meeting at the Chancellery of the Prime Minister in Warsaw, Poland. Photograph: Paweł Supernak/EPA

Warsaw centrist mayor Rafał Trzaskowski, Tusk’s deputy in the Civic Platform party, unexpectedly lost the presidency to right-wing populist Karol Nawrocki, backed by the opposition Law and Justice party, sparking questions over the government’s future.

Unusually, the vote was called by Tusk himself in a bid to shore up his fragile coalition, demonstrate a clear political mandate to govern, and reset the narrative ahead of the 2027 parliamentary election.

But the build up to today’s vote revealed bitter personal and ideological divisions and disagreements within the coalition, as leading politicians publicly blamed each other for the government’s shortcomings and poor delivery on their flagship promises.

The government, which came to power in late 2023, promised to reverse the erosion of democratic checks and balances that had marked the eight-year rule of the Law and Justice party (PiS).

But it faced a politically hostile presidency in the conservative incumbent, Andrzej Duda, who yielded the blocking power of veto. With Nawrocki elected for a five-year term, the government has to learn how to live with a difficult president or face a complete paralysis.

On paper, the governing coalition has a clear majority in the Sejm, with 242 MPs in the 460-seat chamber.

But some government lawmakers indicated they were not happy with the prime minister, and would like to see radical changes in the top team and its priorities. Others were reportedly approached by PiS leaders looking for an alternative, right-wing majority in the parliament.

What could possibly go wrong.

Tusk is scheduled to kick the debate off shortly, with the main vote expected around 2pm Warsaw time (1pm BST).

I will bring you all the key updates here.

It’s Wednesday, 11 June 2025, it’s Jakub Krupa here, and this is Europe Live.

Good morning.

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For context and some balance, the latest CBOS poll from late May showed that 44% voters opposed the government, with 32% expressing their support, 20% taking neutral position, and 4% undecided.

52% were unhappy with the government’s track record, with 35% happy, and 13% undecided.

Asked about Tusk personally, 53% has a negative view of the prime minister, 35% – positive, and 12% had no opinion on him.

Tusk says his government struggled to communicate its successes to the public, as he lists some key achievements.

“If we told our story even half as well as we actually governed, we would be winning election after election,” he says.

He says his government increased defence spending by 67% and stepped up the security of Poland’s eastern border with Belarus.

He also says the new administration stopped the previous government’s alleged large-scale abuses of the visa regime by introducing more stringent checks, which led to a drop in the number of visas issued to residents of Asian and African countries by 50%.

He then goes on to laud the government’s track record with social transfers.

Tusk starts by saying he wants to “get straight to the point” as “this is not a day for long, flowery speeches”.

Polish prime minister Donald Tusk speaks ahead of a vote of confidence for his centre-left coalition cabinet, at parliament in Warsaw, Poland.
Polish prime minister Donald Tusk speaks ahead of a vote of confidence for his centre-left coalition cabinet, at parliament in Warsaw, Poland. Photograph: Kacper Pempel/Reuters

He says that the result of the presidential election makes it clear that the government will face “greater challenges than we expected”.

“This is not an earthquake, but let’s call things for what they are: we are facing two and a half years of very hard … work in [political] conditions that are not going to improve,” he admits.

But he insists the coalition still “has the mandate to govern” it received in 2023, reaffirmed by over 10m votes for the government’s candidate at the presidential election two weeks ago.

He acknowledges “impatience, sometimes disappointment or anger” among voters, and says the government needs to take responsibility for the defeat and “not … offer excuses”, but show a plan for the road ahead.

Tusk mischievously notes the absence of PiS MPs, joking his government clearly has a clear majority in the house today.

Tusk is starting his speech now.

Curiously, most MPs from the main opposition party, Law and Justice, are not in the chamber.

Morning opening: Embattled Tusk seeks fresh start

Jakub Krupa

Jakub Krupa

Polish prime minister Donald Tusk will face a vote of confidence in parliament this afternoon as he seeks to bounce back from his party’s presidential election defeat two weeks ago.

Polish prime minister Donald Tusk attends the government meeting at the Chancellery of the Prime Minister in Warsaw, Poland.
Polish prime minister Donald Tusk attends the government meeting at the Chancellery of the Prime Minister in Warsaw, Poland. Photograph: Paweł Supernak/EPA

Warsaw centrist mayor Rafał Trzaskowski, Tusk’s deputy in the Civic Platform party, unexpectedly lost the presidency to right-wing populist Karol Nawrocki, backed by the opposition Law and Justice party, sparking questions over the government’s future.

Unusually, the vote was called by Tusk himself in a bid to shore up his fragile coalition, demonstrate a clear political mandate to govern, and reset the narrative ahead of the 2027 parliamentary election.

But the build up to today’s vote revealed bitter personal and ideological divisions and disagreements within the coalition, as leading politicians publicly blamed each other for the government’s shortcomings and poor delivery on their flagship promises.

The government, which came to power in late 2023, promised to reverse the erosion of democratic checks and balances that had marked the eight-year rule of the Law and Justice party (PiS).

But it faced a politically hostile presidency in the conservative incumbent, Andrzej Duda, who yielded the blocking power of veto. With Nawrocki elected for a five-year term, the government has to learn how to live with a difficult president or face a complete paralysis.

On paper, the governing coalition has a clear majority in the Sejm, with 242 MPs in the 460-seat chamber.

But some government lawmakers indicated they were not happy with the prime minister, and would like to see radical changes in the top team and its priorities. Others were reportedly approached by PiS leaders looking for an alternative, right-wing majority in the parliament.

What could possibly go wrong.

Tusk is scheduled to kick the debate off shortly, with the main vote expected around 2pm Warsaw time (1pm BST).

I will bring you all the key updates here.

It’s Wednesday, 11 June 2025, it’s Jakub Krupa here, and this is Europe Live.

Good morning.

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