
Poland’s New President Takes Office Under Fire—from Brussels and Tusk
Before he’s even taken office, President-elect Nawrocki is already surrounded—by an EU establishment eager to clip his wings and a prime minister who’s anything but an ally.

Before he’s even taken office, President-elect Nawrocki is already surrounded—by an EU establishment eager to clip his wings and a prime minister who’s anything but an ally.

Progressive politics, once boldly proclaiming itself to be the vanguard of the moral transformation of Western man, feels irrelevant in a world no longer defined by peace and prosperity.

According to a new poll, close to half of those surveyed would like to see the current prime minister gone.

Karol Nawrocki urged Zelenskyy to address the 1940s Volhynia massacre in their first official call.

The industry is more and more dominated by channels that apply censorship to patriotic content.

Poland’s prime minister allegedly tried to stop the swearing-in of the conservative president-elect, triggering claims of a coup attempt.

When voters backed a conservative, PM Tusk’s establishment scrambled to fake doubts and ignore the verdict.

Liberal PM Donald Tusk and his allies had been trying to overturn the outcome of presidential election ever since the results were announcced.

Polish citizens are organizing against the German police who keep dropping off migrants in Poland, while PM Tusk does nothing.

The attempt to delegitimize the presidential result is also a reflection of the ideological struggle between a sovereigntist bloc and a liberal elite operating in sync with Brussels’ power centers.