2006 Polish local elections

2006 Polish regional assembly election

← 2002 12 November 2006 (first round)
26 November 2006 (second round)
2010 →

561 seats to regional assemblies
Turnout45.99%
  First party Second party Third party
 
Donald Tusk (6165309851) (cropped).jpg
Jarosław Kaczyński Sejm 2016a (cropped).JPG
Waldemar Pawlak candidate 2010 E.jpg
Leader Donald Tusk Jarosław Kaczyński Waldemar Pawlak
Party PO PiS PSL
Leader since 1 June 2003 18 January 2003 29 January 2005
Last election part of POPiS part of POPiS 58 seats, 10.81%
Seats before 91 96 58
Seats won 186 170 83
Seat change Increase 79 Increase 74 Increase 25
Percentage 27.18% 25.08% 13.24%
Swing Increase 15.07% Increase 12.97% Increase 2.43%

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Wojciech olejniczak.jpg
Andrzej Lepper in his office 2002 (2) (cropped).jpg
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Leader Wojciech Olejniczak Andrzej Lepper Roman Giertych
Party LiD SRP LPR
Leader since 29 May 2005 10 January 1992 11 March 2006
Last election 189 seats, 24.65% 101 seats, 15.98% 92 seats, 14.36%
Seats before 189 101 92
Seats won 66 37 11
Seat change Decrease 123 Decrease 64 Decrease 81
Percentage 14.25% 5.64% 4.74%
Swing Decrease 10.40% Decrease 10.34% Decrease 9.62%

Result of the voivodeship sejmik elections
Lech and Maria Kaczyński

The 2006 Polish local elections were held in two parts. with its first round on 12 November and the second on 26 November 2006. In the election's first round, voters chose 39,944 gmina councillors, 6,284 powiat councillors and 561 deputies to provincial voivodeship sejmiks. Additionally, 2,460 city and town mayors, borough leaders and other officials were decided by direct or runoff elections in the second round. The elections were seen as a test to the government of Prime Minister Jarosław Kaczyński, whose coalition between his own Law and Justice party and its junior coalition partners, the Self-Defense of the Republic of Poland and the League of Polish Families, had undergone a severe crisis two months prior.[1]

Background

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Following the appointment of Jarosław Kaczyński as Prime Minister following the resignation of Kazimierz Marcinkiewicz, the coalition between Kaczyński's own rightist Law and Justice, the agrarian Self-Defence of the Republic of Poland and the Christian right League of Polish Families parties experienced deep conflict. In September 2006, Self-Defense's leader Andrzej Lepper increasingly sparred with Kaczyński over the national budget, criticizing the prime minister's stance on rural infrastructure spending and sending extra troops to assist the War in Afghanistan.[1] Kaczyński responded by asking for Lepper's dismissal from the government. In light of the political crisis, Kaczyński sought a new coalition partner in order to avoid early elections.[1] One month later in October, Kaczyński and Lepper reconciled, returning Self-Defense to the coalition government and reappointing Lepper as both his deputy and as Minister for Agriculture.[2] However, the coalition crisis dented the government's popularity in opinion polls.[2]

In the midst of the crisis, Kaczyński aide Adam Lipinski was secretly filmed trying to coax Self-Defense Sejm MP Renata Beger to rejoin the coalition government with financial and legal assistance.[3] Beger later handed the film to television networks. The opposition Civic Platform party seized on the scandal, organizing street demonstrations in Warsaw to demand early elections.[4] The government countered the protests by drawing its supporters for demonstrations of its own, claiming the film demonstrated normal political bargaining.

Results

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In the aftermath of the local elections' first round on 12 November, Kaczyński's Law and Justice saw intermediate gains across voivodeship sejmiks and moderate results of powiat and gmina councillor seats. Law and Justice held provincial voivodeship sejmiks in Łódź, Podkarpacie, Małopolska, Lublin, and Podlaskie.[5] In major municipalities, the party significantly lost its majority of councillor seats in Warsaw to Civic Platform, as well as suffered setbacks in Łódź, Poznań and Kraków.[6] The party's candidate for the Warsaw mayoralty, former Prime Minister Kazimierz Marcinkiewicz, finished next to the strong showing of Civic Platform candidate Hanna Gronkiewicz-Waltz. However, in the second round of polls held two weeks later on 26 November, Gronkiewicz-Waltz defeated Marcinkiewicz. The defeat in Warsaw served as a blow to Kaczyński, whose brother Lech previously served as Warsaw's mayor until his election to the presidency in 2005.

The government's major opposition party, Civic Platform, emerged as the winner during the election, increasing its share of representation across seats in voivodeship, county and municipal administrations. In the election results, Civic Platform gained majorities in 10 voivodeships (Warmia-Masuria, Pomerania, West Pomerania, Lubuskie, Lower Silesia, Opole, Silesia, Wielkopolska, Kujawy-Pomerania, and Masovia).[5]

The elections demonstrated a clear defeat for the Left and Democrats, the upstart coalition between the Democratic Left Alliance, Social Democracy of Poland, the Labour Union and the Democratic Party. Still suffering from the fallout of the Rywin affair and Orlengate, the Democratic Left Alliance and its leftist coalition partners lost all majorities in previously held voivodeship sejmiks and a vote decline in local races. However, the party elected candidates Jacek Majchrowski as Mayor of Krakow and Tadeusz Ferenc as Mayor of Rzeszów, though Majchrowski later suspended his party membership to become an independent.

The Polish People's Party fared well during the elections. Managing to increase its share of nearly 14 percent of all powiat councillor seats and 10 percent for all gmina seats, the party was the most elected partisan organization to receive seats in municipal councils.[7]

Law and Justice's coalition partner, the League of Polish Families, suffered during the local elections. The government's coalition party mustered two percent of the vote in the voivodeship sejmiks, a little more than one percent in county councils, and nearly half a percentage point in gmina councils.[8]

Independent politicians or local political activists enjoyed strong results in municipal councils and in city mayoralties.

Minor political parties that participated in the election and fielded candidates in more than one voivodeship include:[9]

Turnout

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12 November 26 November
voting districts 33,362 11,385
electors 29,877,983 14,643,543
ballots 13,742,032 5,812,667
turnout 45.99% 39.69%

Voivodship councils

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Electoral committee % of seats Seats
  Civic Platform (PO) 33.16% 186
  Law and Justice (PiS) 30.30% 170
  Polish People's Party (PSL) 14.80% 83
  Left and Democrats (LiD) 11.76% 66
  Self-Defense of the Republic of Poland (SRP) 6.60% 37
  League of Polish Families (LPR) 1.96% 11
  German Minority (MN) 1.25% 7
  Regional committees .18% 1
Total 100.00% 561

County councils

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Electoral committee % of seats Seats
  Local committees 42.12% 2,647
  Law and Justice (PiS) 19.76% 1,242
  Polish People's Party (PSL) 13.80% 867
  Civic Platform (PO) 12.40% 779
  Left and Democrats (LiD) 7.45% 468
  Self-Defense of the Republic of Poland (SRP) 3.37% 212
  League of Polish Families (LPR) 1.07% 67
  National Party of Retirees and Pensioners 0.03% 2
Total 100.00% 6,284

Municipal councils

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Electoral committee % of seats Seats
  Local committees 71.92% 28,726
  Polish People's Party (PSL) 9.74% 3,890
  Law and Justice (PiS) 7.71% 3,079
  Civic Platform (PO) 4.47% 1,784
  Left and Democrats (LiD) 3.40% 1,357
  Self-Defense of the Republic of Poland (SRP) 2.17% 867
  League of Polish Families (LPR) 0.59% 236
  National Party of Retirees and Pensioners 0.01% 5
Total 100.00% 39,944

Mayors

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Electoral committee % of mayors Mayors
  Local committees 81.87% 2,014
  Polish People's Party (PSL) 10.28% 253
  Law and Justice (PiS) 3.13% 77
  Civic Platform (PO) 1.87% 46
  Left and Democrats (LiD) 1.71% 42
  Self-Defense of the Republic of Poland (SRP) 1.02% 25
  League of Polish Families (LPR) 0.12% 3
Total 100.00% 2,460

Post election controversies

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Following the election, controversy erupted regarding a 2005 law, obliging the mayors of municipalities to publicly disclose their own, as well as their spouse's, financial circumstances. The law required the successful candidate's disclosure statement to be provided within 30 days after their inauguration, whereas the statement regarding the candidate's spouse was to be submitted within 30 days after the actual election. Due to the law, several elected officials resigned, while others refused. The highest profile figure affected newly elected Warsaw mayor of Hanna Gronkiewicz-Waltz, refused to offer her resignation. Waltz submitted her and her husband's statements on 2 January 2007, exactly 30 days after her inauguration. On 20 January the newspaper Dziennik reported that Waltz's documents proceeded past the deadline by two days. Based on this, Prime Minister Jarosław Kaczyński maintained that Gronkiewicz-Waltz's mandate had expired on 28 December 2006, calling for new municipal elections within her jurisdiction. Gronkiewicz-Waltz and Civic Platform argued that the prime minister does not carry authority to make a decision in this matter, and that the case instead be examined by a court. Legal experts maintained that by submitting their statements on the same day, Gronkiewicz-Waltz observed the spirit, if not the letter of the law. Also, having two different deadlines for the statements could be considered as an unconstitutional legal trap. In the meantime, the opposition Civic Platform party announced that it would renominate Gronkiewicz-Waltz should the elections be repeated. On 13 March 2007 the Constitutional Tribunal of Poland ruled against the government, striking down the law. However, those officials who previously resigned were not allowed to return to their posts.

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Polish ruling coalition collapses". BBC News. 2006-09-22. Retrieved 2011-02-13.
  2. ^ a b "Polish PM revives ruling alliance". BBC News. 2006-10-16. Retrieved 2011-02-13.
  3. ^ "Secret film sparks Polish scandal". BBC News. 2006-09-27. Retrieved 2011-02-13.
  4. ^ "Polish rivals hold street rallies". BBC News. 2006-07-10. Retrieved 2011-02-13.
  5. ^ a b "PO odebrała trzy województwa PiS. Jak było w poprzednich wyborach?". Gazeta.pl. 2010-11-22. Retrieved 2011-02-13.
  6. ^ "Polish PM faces local poll blow". BBC News. 2006-10-16. Retrieved 2011-02-13.
  7. ^ "Najwięcej radnych w skali kraju ma PSL". Gazeta.pl. 2006-11-15. Archived from the original on 2011-05-22. Retrieved 2011-02-13.
  8. ^ "Polish government survives local elections". Euronews. 2010-11-13. Archived from the original on 2011-07-23. Retrieved 2011-02-13.
  9. ^ "Geografia wyborcza". gov.pl (in Polish). National Electoral Commission (Poland). 25 November 2006.
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