Andrzej Duda: Polish president loyal to ruling right-wing

Author: Agencies

Polish President Andrzej Duda, the frontrunner in an election Sunday that was delayed several weeks because of the coronavirus pandemic, is a loyal ally of the EU member’s ruling conservatives.

Though Polish presidents wield limited power, a second five-year term for the 48-year-old lawyer would likely cement the governing right-wing Law and Justice (PiS) party’s chances of moving ahead with its agenda.

Duda, who is predicted to be forced into a second-round run-off, has rarely said no to powerful PiS leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski and is known for waving through government policies like generous social benefits and controversial judicial changes.

“He’s a party man, carrying out its orders,” Warsaw-based political analyst Stanislaw Mocek said.

The one time Duda broke from the party came in 2017, when he vetoed two judicial reforms he believed gave too much power to the attorney general, who is also the justice minister — and curtailed his own.

The surprise veto left the PiS stunned and earned Duda applause from the liberal opposition and the European Union, which has repeatedly expressed concern over the judicial changes.

Spiritual heir

Born in 1972 to a family of professors in the southern city of Krakow, Duda was a choir boy and Boy Scout before earning a law degree from the Jagiellonian University in 1996.

When PiS first came to power in 2005, Duda was named deputy justice minister, a job he gave up in 2008 to become an aide to then president Lech Kaczynski, Jaroslaw’s twin.

A devout Catholic, Duda was close to Lech — who in 2010 died when his presidential jet crashed in Smolensk, Russia — and often calls himself his “spiritual heir”.

Duda also has the backing of the present-day incarnation of the Solidarity trade union that brought a peaceful end to communism at home in 1989.

Duda was elected to the Polish parliament in 2011, then to the European Parliament in 2014. But he only became well-known after Kaczynski crowned him presidential candidate.

Duda went on to win the presidential election in May 2015, after promising voters social benefits galore in fiery campaign speeches always featuring his ready smile.

Judicial changes

Like Poland’s powerful Catholic Church, Duda opposes in-vitro fertilisation and the 2011 Istanbul Convention, the world’s first binding legal instrument to prevent and combat violence against women, which Poland ratified in 2015.

He is also in favour of tightening the anti-abortion law — already among Europe’s most restrictive — and recently likened “LGBT ideology” to communism, drawing criticism at home and abroad.

Duda had pledged to lower the retirement age from 67 to 65, a campaign promise he kept. It is also on his watch that the PiS began giving parents a monthly stipend of 500 zloty (110 euro, $130) for every child.

In terms of foreign policy, Duda has worked on strengthening ties with NATO.

Share
Leave a Comment

Recent Posts

  • Pakistan

26-member steering committee formed for tourism promotion

Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif has announced the formation of a 26-member steering committee…

2 mins ago
  • Pakistan

Hafiz Naeem sticks to countrywide protest plan

Jamaat-e-Islami Emir Hafiz Naeemur Rehman said on Friday protests would be held all over Pakistan…

4 mins ago
  • Pakistan

6 dead, 8 injured in Mari Petroleum helicopter crash

At least six people died while eight were critically injured after a helicopter of the…

4 mins ago
  • Pakistan

Pakistan rejects India’s allegations at UN forum as baseless, misleading

Responding to India at the debate titled 'Leadership for Peace' and held under the United…

5 mins ago
  • Pakistan

Reform momentum must continue: IMF

The executive board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has stressed the "sustained implementation" of…

5 mins ago
  • Pakistan

Commerce Minister intervenes to boost rice exports

Federal Minister for Commerce, Jam Kamal Khan has intervenes to boost Rice exports by lifting…

6 mins ago