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2010 Polish local elections

Elections in Poland


Elections in Poland

FieldValue
election_name2010 Polish regional assembly election
countryPoland
typeparliamentary
ongoingno
previous_election2006 Polish local elections
previous_year2006
next_election2014 Polish local elections
next_year2014
seats_for_election561 seats to regional assemblies
election_date21 November 2010 (first round)
5 December 2010 (second round)
registered30,608,506
turnout14,494,179 (47.35%)
1.44pp
image1
leader1Donald Tusk
leader_since11 June 2003
party1Civic Platform
last_election127.1%, 186 seats
seats1222
seat_change136
popular_vote13,930,210
percentage130.9%
swing13.8pp
image2
leader2Jarosław Kaczyński
leader_since218 January 2003
party2Law and Justice
last_election225.0%, 170 seats
seats2141
seat_change229
popular_vote22,931,867
percentage223.1%
swing21.9pp
image3
leader3Waldemar Pawlak
leader_since329 January 2005
party3Polish People's Party
last_election313.2%, 83 seats
seats393
seat_change310
popular_vote32,073,234
percentage316.3%
swing33.1pp
image4
leader4Grzegorz Napieralski
leader_since431 May 2008
party4Democratic Left Alliance (Poland)
last_election414.2%, 66 seats
seats485
seat_change419
popular_vote41,933,913
percentage415.2%
swing41.0pp
image5
leader5Rafał Dutkiewicz
leader_since526 January 2008
party5ODŚ
color5B2BEB5
last_election5Did not exist
seats59
seat_change5Did not exist
popular_vote5208,867
percentage51.6%
swing5Did not exist
image6
leader6Ryszard Galla
leader_since625 September 2005
party6MN
color60780C4
last_election60.4%, 7 seats
seats66
seat_change61
popular_vote653,670
percentage60.4%
swing60.0pp
map_imageFile:2010 Polish voivodeship sejmik elections.svg
map_captionResult of the voivodeship sejmik elections

5 December 2010 (second round) 1.44pp

The 2010 Polish local elections were held in two parts, with its first round on 21 November and the second on 5 December. The first round included elections of deputies to provincial voivodeship sejmiks, as well for gmina and powiat councilors. The second round of elections were marked for mayors, borough leaders, and other positions decided by runoff elections. The local elections were seen as a test to the ruling Civic Platform and Polish People's Party coalition government under Prime Minister Donald Tusk.

Background

As the first polls since the July presidential elections, which saw Civic Platform candidate Bronisław Komorowski defeat Law and Justice MP and former Prime Minister Jarosław Kaczyński, the 2010 local elections were characterized as a test to the administration of Donald Tusk. In the weeks prior to the elections, polls conducted by the CBOS Institute showed the ruling Civic Platform party with a comfortable lead over its rivals. The opposition Law and Justice electoral campaign faced multiple challenges prior to the elections. Polls published in the days leading up to the first round indicated low support for the party. In a related addition, a severe internal party crisis regarding Kaczyński's leadership and the party's ideological direction, simmering among several of the party's more moderate MPs in the Sejm for several months prior, exploded into the open days before the election. The rebel MPs, led by expelled party member Joanna Kluzik-Rostkowska, formed the Poland Comes First parliamentary group on 16 November. The party split further undermined confidence to the government's opposition.

Due to mandates in Polish law, all electioneering, poll surveys, and campaigning ceased on 20 November, in the period known as the "election silence."

Results

Analysis

Following the tabulated results of the election's first round, Civic Platform emerged with a victory, increasing its profile across provincial, county, and municipal councils. In voivodeship sejmiks, Civic Platform won control of 12 voivodeships, and tied for first place in another. The party's national junior coalition partner, the Polish People's Party, won outright in Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship. Law and Justice received a majority in two voivodeships. Following the results, Prime Minister Tusk and Deputy Prime Minister Waldemar Pawlak agreed to extend their coalition into local administrations. Civic Platform performed well in county powiat councils, and also significantly raised its electoral profile in municipal gmina councils.

The Polish People's Party also emerged as a winner following the elections, capturing a strong 16 percent of the vote, exceeding previous expectations from pre-election polling. In powiat councils, the party particularly increased its share thanks to its strong connections to local politics. In gmina elections, the party expanded gains from the previous 2006 local elections.

Law and Justice suffered defeats in all voivodeship, powiat and gmina council tiers of government. While the defeat did not signify a total collapse as survey polls previously suggested, the results pointed towards a general trend of decline for the rightist party, with critics pointing to the perceived aloofness of its party leader, Jarosław Kaczyński.

The center-left Democratic Left Alliance also benefited during the elections. Although pushed to fourth place by the surprising gains of the Polish People's Party, the Democratic Left Alliance increased their numbers in provincial voivodeship sejmiks and powiat councils, though the party suffered losses in gmina council elections.

While Civic Platform achieved considerable success in the outright reelection of Hanna Gronkiewicz-Waltz as Mayor of Warsaw without a second round, the electorate continued to lean for nonpartisan independent mayors. Independent candidates led in over half of the country's 18 largest cities against mainstream party candidates. Civic Platform's attempts to unseat independent mayors in Kraków, Katowice, Poznań, Toruń and Wrocław all ended in defeat.

In the county and municipal levels, independent candidates and local political committees captured the most votes, retaining 38 percent of all county councilor seats and over 71 percent of all municipal councilor seats.

Turnout

The turnout in the first round was 47.32%, and in the second round - 35.31%.

Voivodeship councils

Electoral committee% of seatsSeats/
Civic Platform (PO)39.57%222
Law and Justice (PiS)25.13%141
Polish People's Party (PSL)16.68%93
Democratic Left Alliance (SLD)15.15%85
Citizens of Lower Silesia (ODŚ)1.60%9
German Minority (MN)0.89%6
Silesian Autonomy Movement (RAŚ)0.53%3
Regional committees0.36%2
Self-Defense of the Republic of Poland (SRP)--0
League of Polish Families (LPR)--0
Total100.00%561

County councils

Electoral committee% of seatsSeats/
Local committees38.12%2,398
Civic Platform (PO)20.91%1,315
Law and Justice (PiS)17,25%1,085
Polish People's Party (PSL)15,88%999
Democratic Left Alliance (SLD)7.84%493
Total100.00%6,290

Municipal councils

Electoral committee% of seatsSeats/
Local committees71.5%28,480
Polish People's Party (PSL)11%4,381
Law and Justice (PiS)7%2,782
Civic Platform (PO)6.82%2,719
Democratic Left Alliance (SLD)3.68%1,466
Total100.00%39,828

References

Notes

References

  1. (2010-11-21). "Local elections in Poland test government's popularity". [[Deutsche Welle]].
  2. (2010-11-14). "Campaign hots up before local elections". [[Polskie Radio]].
  3. (2010-11-15). "Opposition face meltdown in local elections?". [[Polskie Radio]].
  4. (2010-11-16). "Law and Justice breakaway politicians form new 'association'". [[Polskie Radio]].
  5. (2010-11-20). "Local election silence descends on Poland". [[Polskie Radio]].
  6. (2010-11-25). "Small change signals big shift". [[The Economist]].
  7. (2010-11-26). "PM and deputy talk of 'local government coalitions'". [[Polskie Radio]].
  8. (2010-11-25). "PiS wszędzie traci, PO zyskuje ponad 1,5 tys. radnych". [[Gazeta.pl]].
  9. (2010-11-22). "Polish Ruling Party Wins Local Elections, but Cracks Show". [[The Wall Street Journal]].
  10. "Samorząd 2010".
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