
Von der Leyen honoured for fostering European unity
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has received the International Charlemagne Prize for contributions to European unity, as the 27-nation bloc confronts Russia's war against Ukraine, the Trump administration's trade war and security issues across the continent.
The European Union's most high-profile political figure, von der Leyen was called "the embodiment of the European spirit" by King Felipe VI of Spain during Thursday's ceremony in Aachen, Germany.
In 2024, European Parliament lawmakers re-elected her to a second five-year term as president of the EU's powerful executive arm.
The commission proposes legislation for the EU's 27 member countries - and its 450 million people - and ensures the rules governing the world's biggest trading bloc are respected. It's made up of a College of Commissioners with a range of portfolios similar to those of government ministers, including agriculture, economic, competition, security and migration policy.
After coming to office in 2019, von der Leyen led the EU drive to secure COVID-19 vaccines and has been a major supporter of Ukraine in its war against Russia. With governments weakened in France and Germany at the time, she sought to play a greater role in the bloc's affairs.
The Spanish king and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who also attended Thursday's ceremony, pushed for stronger European defence as US President Donald Trump threatens to pull back America's protection commitments to the continent, upending the post-World War II order that has formed the basis for global stability and security.
"A clear message is coming out of Washington: Europeans ought to do more to provide for the defence of their own continent," Felipe said. "We should not underestimate how consequential this message is. There are few alive today that have lived in a Europe where the US, the United States, was not the dominant security provider."
Merz, whose election earlier in May was seen as a re-emergence of Germany's status as a diplomatic and economic heavyweight, brought up US Vice President JD Vance's comments at the Munich Security Conference earlier in 2025. Vance, "in his own very special way", confronted what Europeans stand for, Merz said.
Vance at the time complained about the state of democracy and free speech in Europe, and lambasted German political parties - days before a national election - for their so-called "firewall" against working with far-right parties.
"We actually stand for what we have been able to develop, to design, what we have actually fought for during centuries - and despite many backlashes and disasters - that we actually defend what is dear to us and important: freedom and democracy," Merz said.
Both leaders, as well as von der Leyen, emphasised the importance of responding to Trump's changing tariff policies with a single voice.
"We will never be a protectionist continent," von der Leyen said.
The annual International Charlemagne Prize was first awarded in 1950 in Aachen. Charlemagne, considered the first unifier of Europe, had his favourite palace in the western German city in the late eighth century.
Aachen, on the Dutch border, is also famous as the birthplace of teenage diarist Anne Frank's mother, Edith Holländer. She and Otto Frank married in Aachen's synagogue, which was destroyed during the Kristallnacht - or the "Night of Broken Glass" - in 1938 in which the Nazis terrorised Jews throughout Germany and Austria.
The Frank family later left Germany upon Adolf Hitler's rise to power and eventually went into hiding in 1942 in a secret annex in the Nazi-occupied Netherlands. They were later sent to concentration camps, where all but Otto Frank died.
Anne Frank's world-famous diary was published after the end of World War II.
In her speech Thursday, von der Leyen spoke about the Frank family, the synagogue and the city's importance to Europe's history - and its future.
"Today in Aachen, there's a new synagogue," von der Leyen said. "A symbol of rebirth, of resurrection, but also of remembrance. A painful reminder for Europe to be alert and withstand all those who sow hatred and want to divide our society."
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has received the International Charlemagne Prize for contributions to European unity, as the 27-nation bloc confronts Russia's war against Ukraine, the Trump administration's trade war and security issues across the continent.
The European Union's most high-profile political figure, von der Leyen was called "the embodiment of the European spirit" by King Felipe VI of Spain during Thursday's ceremony in Aachen, Germany.
In 2024, European Parliament lawmakers re-elected her to a second five-year term as president of the EU's powerful executive arm.
The commission proposes legislation for the EU's 27 member countries - and its 450 million people - and ensures the rules governing the world's biggest trading bloc are respected. It's made up of a College of Commissioners with a range of portfolios similar to those of government ministers, including agriculture, economic, competition, security and migration policy.
After coming to office in 2019, von der Leyen led the EU drive to secure COVID-19 vaccines and has been a major supporter of Ukraine in its war against Russia. With governments weakened in France and Germany at the time, she sought to play a greater role in the bloc's affairs.
The Spanish king and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who also attended Thursday's ceremony, pushed for stronger European defence as US President Donald Trump threatens to pull back America's protection commitments to the continent, upending the post-World War II order that has formed the basis for global stability and security.
"A clear message is coming out of Washington: Europeans ought to do more to provide for the defence of their own continent," Felipe said. "We should not underestimate how consequential this message is. There are few alive today that have lived in a Europe where the US, the United States, was not the dominant security provider."
Merz, whose election earlier in May was seen as a re-emergence of Germany's status as a diplomatic and economic heavyweight, brought up US Vice President JD Vance's comments at the Munich Security Conference earlier in 2025. Vance, "in his own very special way", confronted what Europeans stand for, Merz said.
Vance at the time complained about the state of democracy and free speech in Europe, and lambasted German political parties - days before a national election - for their so-called "firewall" against working with far-right parties.
"We actually stand for what we have been able to develop, to design, what we have actually fought for during centuries - and despite many backlashes and disasters - that we actually defend what is dear to us and important: freedom and democracy," Merz said.
Both leaders, as well as von der Leyen, emphasised the importance of responding to Trump's changing tariff policies with a single voice.
"We will never be a protectionist continent," von der Leyen said.
The annual International Charlemagne Prize was first awarded in 1950 in Aachen. Charlemagne, considered the first unifier of Europe, had his favourite palace in the western German city in the late eighth century.
Aachen, on the Dutch border, is also famous as the birthplace of teenage diarist Anne Frank's mother, Edith Holländer. She and Otto Frank married in Aachen's synagogue, which was destroyed during the Kristallnacht - or the "Night of Broken Glass" - in 1938 in which the Nazis terrorised Jews throughout Germany and Austria.
The Frank family later left Germany upon Adolf Hitler's rise to power and eventually went into hiding in 1942 in a secret annex in the Nazi-occupied Netherlands. They were later sent to concentration camps, where all but Otto Frank died.
Anne Frank's world-famous diary was published after the end of World War II.
In her speech Thursday, von der Leyen spoke about the Frank family, the synagogue and the city's importance to Europe's history - and its future.
"Today in Aachen, there's a new synagogue," von der Leyen said. "A symbol of rebirth, of resurrection, but also of remembrance. A painful reminder for Europe to be alert and withstand all those who sow hatred and want to divide our society."
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has received the International Charlemagne Prize for contributions to European unity, as the 27-nation bloc confronts Russia's war against Ukraine, the Trump administration's trade war and security issues across the continent.
The European Union's most high-profile political figure, von der Leyen was called "the embodiment of the European spirit" by King Felipe VI of Spain during Thursday's ceremony in Aachen, Germany.
In 2024, European Parliament lawmakers re-elected her to a second five-year term as president of the EU's powerful executive arm.
The commission proposes legislation for the EU's 27 member countries - and its 450 million people - and ensures the rules governing the world's biggest trading bloc are respected. It's made up of a College of Commissioners with a range of portfolios similar to those of government ministers, including agriculture, economic, competition, security and migration policy.
After coming to office in 2019, von der Leyen led the EU drive to secure COVID-19 vaccines and has been a major supporter of Ukraine in its war against Russia. With governments weakened in France and Germany at the time, she sought to play a greater role in the bloc's affairs.
The Spanish king and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who also attended Thursday's ceremony, pushed for stronger European defence as US President Donald Trump threatens to pull back America's protection commitments to the continent, upending the post-World War II order that has formed the basis for global stability and security.
"A clear message is coming out of Washington: Europeans ought to do more to provide for the defence of their own continent," Felipe said. "We should not underestimate how consequential this message is. There are few alive today that have lived in a Europe where the US, the United States, was not the dominant security provider."
Merz, whose election earlier in May was seen as a re-emergence of Germany's status as a diplomatic and economic heavyweight, brought up US Vice President JD Vance's comments at the Munich Security Conference earlier in 2025. Vance, "in his own very special way", confronted what Europeans stand for, Merz said.
Vance at the time complained about the state of democracy and free speech in Europe, and lambasted German political parties - days before a national election - for their so-called "firewall" against working with far-right parties.
"We actually stand for what we have been able to develop, to design, what we have actually fought for during centuries - and despite many backlashes and disasters - that we actually defend what is dear to us and important: freedom and democracy," Merz said.
Both leaders, as well as von der Leyen, emphasised the importance of responding to Trump's changing tariff policies with a single voice.
"We will never be a protectionist continent," von der Leyen said.
The annual International Charlemagne Prize was first awarded in 1950 in Aachen. Charlemagne, considered the first unifier of Europe, had his favourite palace in the western German city in the late eighth century.
Aachen, on the Dutch border, is also famous as the birthplace of teenage diarist Anne Frank's mother, Edith Holländer. She and Otto Frank married in Aachen's synagogue, which was destroyed during the Kristallnacht - or the "Night of Broken Glass" - in 1938 in which the Nazis terrorised Jews throughout Germany and Austria.
The Frank family later left Germany upon Adolf Hitler's rise to power and eventually went into hiding in 1942 in a secret annex in the Nazi-occupied Netherlands. They were later sent to concentration camps, where all but Otto Frank died.
Anne Frank's world-famous diary was published after the end of World War II.
In her speech Thursday, von der Leyen spoke about the Frank family, the synagogue and the city's importance to Europe's history - and its future.
"Today in Aachen, there's a new synagogue," von der Leyen said. "A symbol of rebirth, of resurrection, but also of remembrance. A painful reminder for Europe to be alert and withstand all those who sow hatred and want to divide our society."
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has received the International Charlemagne Prize for contributions to European unity, as the 27-nation bloc confronts Russia's war against Ukraine, the Trump administration's trade war and security issues across the continent.
The European Union's most high-profile political figure, von der Leyen was called "the embodiment of the European spirit" by King Felipe VI of Spain during Thursday's ceremony in Aachen, Germany.
In 2024, European Parliament lawmakers re-elected her to a second five-year term as president of the EU's powerful executive arm.
The commission proposes legislation for the EU's 27 member countries - and its 450 million people - and ensures the rules governing the world's biggest trading bloc are respected. It's made up of a College of Commissioners with a range of portfolios similar to those of government ministers, including agriculture, economic, competition, security and migration policy.
After coming to office in 2019, von der Leyen led the EU drive to secure COVID-19 vaccines and has been a major supporter of Ukraine in its war against Russia. With governments weakened in France and Germany at the time, she sought to play a greater role in the bloc's affairs.
The Spanish king and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who also attended Thursday's ceremony, pushed for stronger European defence as US President Donald Trump threatens to pull back America's protection commitments to the continent, upending the post-World War II order that has formed the basis for global stability and security.
"A clear message is coming out of Washington: Europeans ought to do more to provide for the defence of their own continent," Felipe said. "We should not underestimate how consequential this message is. There are few alive today that have lived in a Europe where the US, the United States, was not the dominant security provider."
Merz, whose election earlier in May was seen as a re-emergence of Germany's status as a diplomatic and economic heavyweight, brought up US Vice President JD Vance's comments at the Munich Security Conference earlier in 2025. Vance, "in his own very special way", confronted what Europeans stand for, Merz said.
Vance at the time complained about the state of democracy and free speech in Europe, and lambasted German political parties - days before a national election - for their so-called "firewall" against working with far-right parties.
"We actually stand for what we have been able to develop, to design, what we have actually fought for during centuries - and despite many backlashes and disasters - that we actually defend what is dear to us and important: freedom and democracy," Merz said.
Both leaders, as well as von der Leyen, emphasised the importance of responding to Trump's changing tariff policies with a single voice.
"We will never be a protectionist continent," von der Leyen said.
The annual International Charlemagne Prize was first awarded in 1950 in Aachen. Charlemagne, considered the first unifier of Europe, had his favourite palace in the western German city in the late eighth century.
Aachen, on the Dutch border, is also famous as the birthplace of teenage diarist Anne Frank's mother, Edith Holländer. She and Otto Frank married in Aachen's synagogue, which was destroyed during the Kristallnacht - or the "Night of Broken Glass" - in 1938 in which the Nazis terrorised Jews throughout Germany and Austria.
The Frank family later left Germany upon Adolf Hitler's rise to power and eventually went into hiding in 1942 in a secret annex in the Nazi-occupied Netherlands. They were later sent to concentration camps, where all but Otto Frank died.
Anne Frank's world-famous diary was published after the end of World War II.
In her speech Thursday, von der Leyen spoke about the Frank family, the synagogue and the city's importance to Europe's history - and its future.
"Today in Aachen, there's a new synagogue," von der Leyen said. "A symbol of rebirth, of resurrection, but also of remembrance. A painful reminder for Europe to be alert and withstand all those who sow hatred and want to divide our society."
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The Age
2 hours ago
- The Age
Caught between two Wests, Poland tilts towards the Trumpian model
Those hopes evaporated on Monday. Exit polling data on Sunday night showed a win for Trzaskowski. But once the ballots were counted, Nawrocki had 50.9 per cent of the vote. It was hardly an emphatic triumph for what Prime Minister Viktor Orban of Hungary has proclaimed a 'new era of the patriots of Western civilisation' led by Trump. But it showed that nationalism has staying power. Victory for Nawrocki, said Michal Szuldrzynski, editor-in-chief of Rzeczpospolita, a centrist newspaper, 'heralds a period of great turbulence in Poland and in the world – the effect of the global wave of Trumpism'. On Monday, Orban, an admirer of Trump and would-be leader of a European movement made in his image, welcomed Trzaskowski's defeat. France's hard-right standard-bearer, Marine Le Pen, celebrated the result as a 'rejection of a Brussels oligarchy' intent on imposing its policies 'without any democratic will'. Whether on the left or right, voters interviewed in Warsaw on election day said the importance of the vote went beyond just the largely ceremonial presidency. 'That is peanuts,' Jan Brykczynski, 62, a psychologist, said of the presidency, after casting his vote for Trzaskowski. 'The stakes are much higher.' Loading Krystina Kwiatkowska, 61, a health care worker forced into early retirement last year by government spending cuts, said she did not particularly like Nawrocki but voted for him because she wanted to make sure that Tusk did not have a free hand. It was good for Poland to stay anchored in both Western camps, she said. Trzaskowski, she said, had done a good job as the mayor of Warsaw. But, she added, he was not his own man because 'above him there is always this red fox', using an expression the right often deploys to present Tusk as a conniving enemy of Poland's national interest. Piotr Buras, the head of the Warsaw office of the European Council on Foreign Relations, said Nawrocki had falsely framed the election as a choice between Washington and Brussels. He had done this 'for domestic political purposes', disconnected from the reality of a country that wanted good relations with both, Buras added. 'Ideologically and politically, Nawrocki represents the other concept of the West, the one defined by Vance in Munich,' he said, referring to a February speech in which US Vice President J.D. Vance accused Europe of retreating from shared values with the United States by trying to isolate hard-right parties. 'A majority of Poles decided to go for a candidate who is close to Trump, but that was not their main motivation,' Buras said. Poland, he added, was 'very divided, but voters were not consciously choosing any foreign policy orientation'. On the campaign trail, Nawrocki assailed Tusk for, in his telling, jeopardising Poland's traditionally strong relations with the United States, which has around 10,000 soldiers in the country and has long been viewed as the guarantor of Polish security. Last month, Trump received Nawrocki in the Oval Office, an honour so far denied to the Polish prime minister. Emboldened by Trump's frequent criticism of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, Nawrocki has recently given voice to deep currents of anti-Ukrainian sentiment in Poland. Those feelings, rooted in history, have been largely suppressed since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, with most Poles agreeing that Ukraine needs to be supported militarily as part of the defence of Europe from Russian aggression. But Nawrocki has said he would not support future Ukrainian membership of either NATO or the European Union, neither of which is really on the table – though Orban and other European populists have used the distant possibility to bash their liberal opponents. Loading Zelensky, in a message written in Polish on social platform X, congratulated Nawrocki, reminding him that Poland 'was and remains the foundation of regional and European security and a strong voice in defence of the freedom and dignity of every nation'. The Polish presidency has no significant say in setting foreign, economic or other policy, which is the preserve of Tusk and his ministers. But it can act as a centre of opposition to the government by deploying its veto power over legislation and the bully pulpit provided by its role as head of state. The departing president, Andrzej Duda, is also an ally of Law and Justice, and frequently vetoed laws passed by Tusk's majority in parliament or sent them for review by courts stacked with loyalists of the previous government. The election of Nawrocki, a pugnacious former boxer, to replace Duda is likely to harden the logjam. It could also exacerbate tensions within Tusk's fractious coalition of liberal, leftist and conservative parties, which have a majority in parliament but not the three-fifths of the seats needed to override a presidential veto. Nawrocki, said Kuisz, the political analyst, 'is much more combative than Duda, and he is going to make life much harder for Tusk and Sikorski', referring to Poland's Foreign Minister, Radoslaw Sikorski. Tusk, a former senior official in Brussels who is widely respected by mainstream European politicians, 'suffers from Gorbachev syndrome', Kuisz added, referring to Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, who co-operated with Washington to end the Cold War. 'He is more appreciated abroad than at home.'

Sydney Morning Herald
2 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Caught between two Wests, Poland tilts towards the Trumpian model
Those hopes evaporated on Monday. Exit polling data on Sunday night showed a win for Trzaskowski. But once the ballots were counted, Nawrocki had 50.9 per cent of the vote. It was hardly an emphatic triumph for what Prime Minister Viktor Orban of Hungary has proclaimed a 'new era of the patriots of Western civilisation' led by Trump. But it showed that nationalism has staying power. Victory for Nawrocki, said Michal Szuldrzynski, editor-in-chief of Rzeczpospolita, a centrist newspaper, 'heralds a period of great turbulence in Poland and in the world – the effect of the global wave of Trumpism'. On Monday, Orban, an admirer of Trump and would-be leader of a European movement made in his image, welcomed Trzaskowski's defeat. France's hard-right standard-bearer, Marine Le Pen, celebrated the result as a 'rejection of a Brussels oligarchy' intent on imposing its policies 'without any democratic will'. Whether on the left or right, voters interviewed in Warsaw on election day said the importance of the vote went beyond just the largely ceremonial presidency. 'That is peanuts,' Jan Brykczynski, 62, a psychologist, said of the presidency, after casting his vote for Trzaskowski. 'The stakes are much higher.' Loading Krystina Kwiatkowska, 61, a health care worker forced into early retirement last year by government spending cuts, said she did not particularly like Nawrocki but voted for him because she wanted to make sure that Tusk did not have a free hand. It was good for Poland to stay anchored in both Western camps, she said. Trzaskowski, she said, had done a good job as the mayor of Warsaw. But, she added, he was not his own man because 'above him there is always this red fox', using an expression the right often deploys to present Tusk as a conniving enemy of Poland's national interest. Piotr Buras, the head of the Warsaw office of the European Council on Foreign Relations, said Nawrocki had falsely framed the election as a choice between Washington and Brussels. He had done this 'for domestic political purposes', disconnected from the reality of a country that wanted good relations with both, Buras added. 'Ideologically and politically, Nawrocki represents the other concept of the West, the one defined by Vance in Munich,' he said, referring to a February speech in which US Vice President J.D. Vance accused Europe of retreating from shared values with the United States by trying to isolate hard-right parties. 'A majority of Poles decided to go for a candidate who is close to Trump, but that was not their main motivation,' Buras said. Poland, he added, was 'very divided, but voters were not consciously choosing any foreign policy orientation'. On the campaign trail, Nawrocki assailed Tusk for, in his telling, jeopardising Poland's traditionally strong relations with the United States, which has around 10,000 soldiers in the country and has long been viewed as the guarantor of Polish security. Last month, Trump received Nawrocki in the Oval Office, an honour so far denied to the Polish prime minister. Emboldened by Trump's frequent criticism of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, Nawrocki has recently given voice to deep currents of anti-Ukrainian sentiment in Poland. Those feelings, rooted in history, have been largely suppressed since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, with most Poles agreeing that Ukraine needs to be supported militarily as part of the defence of Europe from Russian aggression. But Nawrocki has said he would not support future Ukrainian membership of either NATO or the European Union, neither of which is really on the table – though Orban and other European populists have used the distant possibility to bash their liberal opponents. Loading Zelensky, in a message written in Polish on social platform X, congratulated Nawrocki, reminding him that Poland 'was and remains the foundation of regional and European security and a strong voice in defence of the freedom and dignity of every nation'. The Polish presidency has no significant say in setting foreign, economic or other policy, which is the preserve of Tusk and his ministers. But it can act as a centre of opposition to the government by deploying its veto power over legislation and the bully pulpit provided by its role as head of state. The departing president, Andrzej Duda, is also an ally of Law and Justice, and frequently vetoed laws passed by Tusk's majority in parliament or sent them for review by courts stacked with loyalists of the previous government. The election of Nawrocki, a pugnacious former boxer, to replace Duda is likely to harden the logjam. It could also exacerbate tensions within Tusk's fractious coalition of liberal, leftist and conservative parties, which have a majority in parliament but not the three-fifths of the seats needed to override a presidential veto. Nawrocki, said Kuisz, the political analyst, 'is much more combative than Duda, and he is going to make life much harder for Tusk and Sikorski', referring to Poland's Foreign Minister, Radoslaw Sikorski. Tusk, a former senior official in Brussels who is widely respected by mainstream European politicians, 'suffers from Gorbachev syndrome', Kuisz added, referring to Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, who co-operated with Washington to end the Cold War. 'He is more appreciated abroad than at home.'


The Advertiser
3 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Polish PM seeks confidence vote after presidential poll
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk will call for a vote of confidence in parliament following the nation's close presidential election. Conservative Karol Nawrocki's victory in Poland's weekend presidential runoff has set the country on a more nationalist course - and cast doubt on the viability of the centrist government of Tusk after the defeat of his liberal ally. Describing it as the first test of his coalition's resolve, Tusk said in a televised address on Monday that his government's agenda under the new president would require "unity and courage" from the three-party alliance. Tusk has led a centre-left coalition since late 2023. Nawrocki won a knife-edge vote against his opponent, liberal candidate and Warsaw Mayor Rafał Trzaskowski in Sunday's run-off election. Nawrocki, who represents the nationalist conservative Law and Justice party (PiS), garnered nearly 51 per cent of the vote, while Trzaskowski, who had Tusk's support, won just over 49 per cent. Nawrocki's election is likely to complicate Tusk's efforts to push through his pro-EU government's policies, as Nawrocki represents the rival conservative party and as president will have the power to veto legislation. "According to the constitution and our conscience, we will co-operate with the new president wherever necessary and possible," Tusk said. At the same time, he made clear: "Everyone will see that the government has no intention of retreating even one step." Nawrocki's supporters describe him as the embodiment of traditional, patriotic values. Those who oppose secular trends, including LGBTQ+ visibility, have embraced him, viewing him as a reflection of the values they grew up with. In Poland, the president holds a five-year term and has broad powers, including representing the country abroad, shaping foreign policy, appointing the prime minister and the Cabinet, and serving as commander-in-chief of the armed forces in the event of war. The president also has the power of veto over legislation that has passed through parliament - a power used on several occasions by outgoing President Andrzej Duda, who like Nawrocki represents PiS. The central objective of Tusk's administration is to repair the damage to the rule of law caused by the PiS-led government, which held power from 2015 to 2023, and overhauled the judiciary in ways widely seen as undermining judicial independence. Key legislative efforts have been blocked by outgoing president Duda, a PiS ally. with AP Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk will call for a vote of confidence in parliament following the nation's close presidential election. Conservative Karol Nawrocki's victory in Poland's weekend presidential runoff has set the country on a more nationalist course - and cast doubt on the viability of the centrist government of Tusk after the defeat of his liberal ally. Describing it as the first test of his coalition's resolve, Tusk said in a televised address on Monday that his government's agenda under the new president would require "unity and courage" from the three-party alliance. Tusk has led a centre-left coalition since late 2023. Nawrocki won a knife-edge vote against his opponent, liberal candidate and Warsaw Mayor Rafał Trzaskowski in Sunday's run-off election. Nawrocki, who represents the nationalist conservative Law and Justice party (PiS), garnered nearly 51 per cent of the vote, while Trzaskowski, who had Tusk's support, won just over 49 per cent. Nawrocki's election is likely to complicate Tusk's efforts to push through his pro-EU government's policies, as Nawrocki represents the rival conservative party and as president will have the power to veto legislation. "According to the constitution and our conscience, we will co-operate with the new president wherever necessary and possible," Tusk said. At the same time, he made clear: "Everyone will see that the government has no intention of retreating even one step." Nawrocki's supporters describe him as the embodiment of traditional, patriotic values. Those who oppose secular trends, including LGBTQ+ visibility, have embraced him, viewing him as a reflection of the values they grew up with. In Poland, the president holds a five-year term and has broad powers, including representing the country abroad, shaping foreign policy, appointing the prime minister and the Cabinet, and serving as commander-in-chief of the armed forces in the event of war. The president also has the power of veto over legislation that has passed through parliament - a power used on several occasions by outgoing President Andrzej Duda, who like Nawrocki represents PiS. The central objective of Tusk's administration is to repair the damage to the rule of law caused by the PiS-led government, which held power from 2015 to 2023, and overhauled the judiciary in ways widely seen as undermining judicial independence. Key legislative efforts have been blocked by outgoing president Duda, a PiS ally. with AP Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk will call for a vote of confidence in parliament following the nation's close presidential election. Conservative Karol Nawrocki's victory in Poland's weekend presidential runoff has set the country on a more nationalist course - and cast doubt on the viability of the centrist government of Tusk after the defeat of his liberal ally. Describing it as the first test of his coalition's resolve, Tusk said in a televised address on Monday that his government's agenda under the new president would require "unity and courage" from the three-party alliance. Tusk has led a centre-left coalition since late 2023. Nawrocki won a knife-edge vote against his opponent, liberal candidate and Warsaw Mayor Rafał Trzaskowski in Sunday's run-off election. Nawrocki, who represents the nationalist conservative Law and Justice party (PiS), garnered nearly 51 per cent of the vote, while Trzaskowski, who had Tusk's support, won just over 49 per cent. Nawrocki's election is likely to complicate Tusk's efforts to push through his pro-EU government's policies, as Nawrocki represents the rival conservative party and as president will have the power to veto legislation. "According to the constitution and our conscience, we will co-operate with the new president wherever necessary and possible," Tusk said. At the same time, he made clear: "Everyone will see that the government has no intention of retreating even one step." Nawrocki's supporters describe him as the embodiment of traditional, patriotic values. Those who oppose secular trends, including LGBTQ+ visibility, have embraced him, viewing him as a reflection of the values they grew up with. In Poland, the president holds a five-year term and has broad powers, including representing the country abroad, shaping foreign policy, appointing the prime minister and the Cabinet, and serving as commander-in-chief of the armed forces in the event of war. The president also has the power of veto over legislation that has passed through parliament - a power used on several occasions by outgoing President Andrzej Duda, who like Nawrocki represents PiS. The central objective of Tusk's administration is to repair the damage to the rule of law caused by the PiS-led government, which held power from 2015 to 2023, and overhauled the judiciary in ways widely seen as undermining judicial independence. Key legislative efforts have been blocked by outgoing president Duda, a PiS ally. with AP Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk will call for a vote of confidence in parliament following the nation's close presidential election. Conservative Karol Nawrocki's victory in Poland's weekend presidential runoff has set the country on a more nationalist course - and cast doubt on the viability of the centrist government of Tusk after the defeat of his liberal ally. Describing it as the first test of his coalition's resolve, Tusk said in a televised address on Monday that his government's agenda under the new president would require "unity and courage" from the three-party alliance. Tusk has led a centre-left coalition since late 2023. Nawrocki won a knife-edge vote against his opponent, liberal candidate and Warsaw Mayor Rafał Trzaskowski in Sunday's run-off election. Nawrocki, who represents the nationalist conservative Law and Justice party (PiS), garnered nearly 51 per cent of the vote, while Trzaskowski, who had Tusk's support, won just over 49 per cent. Nawrocki's election is likely to complicate Tusk's efforts to push through his pro-EU government's policies, as Nawrocki represents the rival conservative party and as president will have the power to veto legislation. "According to the constitution and our conscience, we will co-operate with the new president wherever necessary and possible," Tusk said. At the same time, he made clear: "Everyone will see that the government has no intention of retreating even one step." Nawrocki's supporters describe him as the embodiment of traditional, patriotic values. Those who oppose secular trends, including LGBTQ+ visibility, have embraced him, viewing him as a reflection of the values they grew up with. In Poland, the president holds a five-year term and has broad powers, including representing the country abroad, shaping foreign policy, appointing the prime minister and the Cabinet, and serving as commander-in-chief of the armed forces in the event of war. The president also has the power of veto over legislation that has passed through parliament - a power used on several occasions by outgoing President Andrzej Duda, who like Nawrocki represents PiS. The central objective of Tusk's administration is to repair the damage to the rule of law caused by the PiS-led government, which held power from 2015 to 2023, and overhauled the judiciary in ways widely seen as undermining judicial independence. Key legislative efforts have been blocked by outgoing president Duda, a PiS ally. with AP