logo
Nawrocki: Nationalist historian vying for Polish presidency

Nawrocki: Nationalist historian vying for Polish presidency

The Sun2 days ago

WARSAW: Karol Nawrocki, a nationalist historian who has written about the criminal underworld, heads into Sunday's presidential run-off tied with his opponent, pro-EU Warsaw mayor Rafal Trzaskowski.
Nawrocki has been endorsed by the right-wing Law and Justice (PiS) party, which governed Poland from 2015 to 2023.
The party is closely allied with outgoing President Andrzej Duda -- who has publicly backed Nawrocki -- and is a long-standing rival of the ruling Civic Coalition.
Nawrocki campaigned under the slogan 'Poland first, Poles first'.
While he has pledged to continue Poland's support for neighbouring Ukraine against Russia's invasion, he has denounced the benefits given to war refugees.
He said in a campaign video in April that 'social benefits will be above all for Poles' and that 'in queues for doctors and clinics, Polish citizens must have priority'.
In May, he claimed Ukraine 'has not shown gratitude for what Poles have done' and accused President Volodymyr Zelensky of 'insolence'.
He opposes Ukraine's bid to join NATO.
- Photos with Trump -
Nawrocki is an admirer of Donald Trump and has said Poland should focus on shaping and leading Europe's relations with the US president.
Nawrocki met Trump at the White House in May and claimed Trump had told him: 'You will win'.
Some lawmakers from the governing coalition have accused Trump of election interference.
US Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem also endorsed Nawrocki when she attended a conservative conference in Poland, saying: 'He needs to be the next president.'
Nawrocki has called for controls on the border with Germany to keep out migrants, and would like Berlin to pay wartime reparations to Poland.
While wooing voters ahead of the razor-edge run-off, Nawrocki signed an eight-point pledge prepared by far-right leader Slawomir Mentzen.
The election campaign saw Nawrocki embroiled in a series of scandals.
While arguing against a property tax, he claimed to only own one flat. Later it was revealed he had acquired a second one through a convoluted deal with an elderly man.
A bombshell news report also alleged he had arranged prostitutes for guests while working as a hotel security guard.
Nawrocki called the accusations 'a bunch of lies' and said he would sue the news site.
Born in the Baltic port city of Gdansk, Nawrocki boxed and played football in his youth before earning a PhD in history and an MBA.
He served as the director of the World War II museum in Gdansk from 2017 to 2021. Since then, he has led the Institute of National Remembrance, which investigates Nazi and communist-era crimes.
His research focuses on Poland's anti-communist opposition, organised crime during the communist era and sports history.
Last year, Russia added Nawrocki to its wanted list for his alleged efforts to remove Soviet-era monuments in Poland.
Nawrocki said he obtained a gun licence and firearm after winding up in Russia's crosshairs.
- Dual identity -
Nawrocki has written several books, including one under a pen name that landed him in an unusual controversy.
In 2018, he secretly published a book about the communist-era gangster Nikodem Skotarczak using the pseudonym Tadeusz Batyr.
That same year, a blurred and voice-altered 'Batyr' appeared on state television claiming Nawrocki had inspired the book.
Nawrocki later wrote on social media that Batyr had sought his advice and 'thanked me with an interesting book, which I recommend'.
But local media recently uncovered that Batyr and Nawrocki were one and the same.
One TikTok user said: 'Maybe they'll substitute Batyr for Nawrocki in the runoff. In any case, the one backs the other. That's two votes already.'
Political opponents seized on the revelation.
Nawrocki has also faced accusations of ties to gangsters and neo-Nazis, which he has rejected as 'deep manipulation', insisting his contacts were for professional purposes.
'No one has ever heard a good word from me about Nazism,' he said.
Nawrocki speaks English and still boxes in his spare time. He has said Poland needs 'a strong president for tough times'.
He lives with his wife, Marta, and has two children and an adult stepson.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

China chamber decries EU discriminatory curbs on Chinese medical device firms
China chamber decries EU discriminatory curbs on Chinese medical device firms

The Star

timean hour ago

  • The Star

China chamber decries EU discriminatory curbs on Chinese medical device firms

BRUSSELS, June 2 (Xinhua) -- The China Chamber of Commerce to the EU (CCCEU) on Monday decried a decision by EU member states to block Chinese companies from participating in public procurement tenders in the medical device sector for contracts valued over 5 million euros (5.72 million U.S. dollars) under the bloc's International Procurement Instrument (IPI). The measures, reportedly approved on Monday, would prohibit Chinese firms from bidding on such contracts for a five-year period. In a statement, the CCCEU expressed profound disappointment and serious concern over the decision, warning that the targeted use of the IPI against Chinese enterprises sends a troubling signal. The chamber stressed that the measures not only "add new complexity to China-EU economic and trade relations," but also contradict the EU's proclaimed principles of openness, fairness, and non-discrimination in market access. The IPI, a unilateral tool adopted by the EU in 2022, aims to ensure the so-called "market reciprocity" in public procurement. The CCCEU argued that any push for reciprocity must be based on "an accurate understanding of historical and practical realities," noting European medical device companies have enjoyed significant access to China's market for years. "The EU's current decision fails to acknowledge this context and undermines the spirit of balanced engagement and mutual benefit," it said. The chamber also voiced broader concerns over rising protectionism, pointing to recent unilateral tariff measures by certain countries that have disrupted global trade. "China and the EU, as two major global economies, should jointly uphold free trade and multilateral cooperation, instead of introducing unilateral restrictions that escalate tensions," the statement added. Chinese firms have "consistently operated in compliance with laws and regulations," the chamber added, stressing their contributions to the EU through investment, technological advancement and job creation. The CCCEU has urged EU policymakers to reconsider the "necessity and long-term implications" of the IPI measures, warning that using policy tools as de facto trade barriers could harm bilateral interests and undermine global economic recovery efforts. (1 euro = 1.14 U.S. dollar)

Polish PM Tusk to call for vote of confidence in government
Polish PM Tusk to call for vote of confidence in government

The Star

time4 hours ago

  • The Star

Polish PM Tusk to call for vote of confidence in government

FILE PHOTO: Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk talks to the press after their meeting on May 16, 2025 in Tirana, Albania. Leon Neal/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo WARSAW (Reuters) -Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk will call for a parliamentary vote of confidence in his coalition government, after his candidate, Rafal Trzaskowski, lost the presidential election on Sunday. "The first test will be a vote of confidence, which I will ask in the Parliament soon," Tusk said on Monday in a televised speech."I want everyone to see, including our opponents, at home and abroad, that we are ready for this situation, that we understand the gravity of the moment, but that we do not intend to take a single step back." Nationalist opposition candidate Karol Nawrocki narrowly won Poland's presidential election, delivering a blow to the centrist government's efforts to cement Warsaw's pro-European orientation. (Reporting by Justyna Pawlak, Marek Strzelecki and Pawel Florkiewicz; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)

Analysis-Polish nationalist's election victory deepens fiscal uncertainty
Analysis-Polish nationalist's election victory deepens fiscal uncertainty

The Star

time8 hours ago

  • The Star

Analysis-Polish nationalist's election victory deepens fiscal uncertainty

WARSAW/LONDON (Reuters) -Poland's path to narrowing its fiscal deficit, maintaining its credit ratings and keeping investors on board looks more difficult following conservative nationalist Karol Nawrocki's presidential election triumph. Nawrocki's victory in Sunday's election could deal a blow to the centrist government's efforts to cement the European Union and NATO member state's pro-European orientation. Poland faces big spending demands, including a rise in defence outlays after Russia's invasion of Ukraine, and is grappling with the EU's second-highest fiscal deficit, driven in part by what are widely seen as generous social policies. Prime Minister Donald Tusk, who returned to power in 2023, has struggled to fulfil electoral promises that could strain public finances and the outgoing president, Andrzej Duda, has used his presidential veto powers to block some of Tusk's political agenda. Nawrocki, who like Duda is aligned with the opposition, could employ similar tactics, possibly delaying reforms and increasing the government's reliance on fiscal measures in the run-up to a 2027 national election. "The Nawrocki presidency will fuel domestic political instability. Tusk's reform agenda will be paralysed," Eurasia group analyst Orsolya Raczova said in a note, adding that Nawrocki could "actively stoke tension among coalition partners." S&P Global said that, at a minimum, Tusk could during Nawrocki's presidency expect similarly "uneasy relations" between the president and the government, and that Poland's economic strength and medium-term fiscal policies would remain the most important factors for Poland's credit rating. Poland has pledged to bring its budget deficit below 3% of gross domestic product by 2028, but, given the high-stakes election calendar, Tusk's government has ramped up borrowing to record levels ahead of the presidential ballot. UNDER PRESSURE Polish stocks fell on Monday from near 14-year-highs, underperforming central European peers, and Poland's international bonds also came under pressure, with longer-dated maturities down between 0.5-0.7 cents on the euro, Tradeweb data showed. Hasnain Malik, managing director with Tellimer, said the result was a "jolt" to investors. Before Monday, the zloty had been up 11% versus the dollar this year and the local equity index had been up 40% in total U.S. dollar return terms. The International Monetary Fund projected in April that Poland's economy would grow 3.2% this year and 3.1% in 2026, and slow to 2.7% by 2030. But last month the European Commission forecast that the deficit would be more than 6% of GDP this year and next, nearly double the average for the 27-member EU and the bloc's second-highest behind Romania. The yield on Poland's 10-year domestic government bond - a key benchmark for borrowing costs - is currently at around 5.5% - below the 6% mark it hovered around for much of the first three months of the year. "Poland is likely to face continued political polarisation in the coming years, with the next general elections scheduled for 2027, potentially increasing reliance on expansionary fiscal policies and delaying fiscal consolidation," Scope Ratings said. S&P warned last week that while it was "not in a rush" to adjust Poland's 'A-' credit rating, the deep polarisation in Polish politics made lowering deficits potentially risky. Poland has a narrow window before the next election to craft a medium-term fiscal adjustment. Some economic analysts say its ability to do so now looks more uncertain. "It is likely to be increasingly more challenging to implement fiscal tightening measures after the loss by the ruling coalition in the presidential election," Ercan Erguzel, an economist at Barclays, wrote in a note. One of Tusk's main unfulfilled electoral promises is a doubling of the income tax free threshold, with an estimated price tag of some 55 billion zloty ($14.76 billion), coming on top of social benefits already widely viewed as generous. Aleks Szczerbiak, politics professor at the University of Sussex, said Tusk's government was hostage to its income tax pledge, with cost-of-living issues still weighing on Poles despite inflation retreating. "If they get to the next election, and there's no road map and they haven't started implementing it, that tax free allowance thing is very, very difficult," he said, adding that the political demand was directly at odds with the economic imperative. "And I'm not quite sure how they're going to square that circle." ($1 = 3.7264 zlotys) (Additional reporting by Paweł Florkiewicz, Editing by Libby George and Timothy Heritage)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store