(7 Apr 2024)
RESTRICTIONS SUMMARY:
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Warsaw, Poland - 07 April 2024
1. Exterior of polling station, voter walking in
2. SOUNDBITE (Polish) Zofia Slezakiewicz, Resident of Warsaw:
"These are elections about us, for us and about us. If we choose some crazy people, we won't be able to complain later, because it was our choice. I can't imagine people not coming to the polls and then complaining that they feel very bad."
3. Interior of polling station as voting begins
4. Various of voter registering to vote with electoral staff
5. Various of voters at voting booths, casting vote
6. SOUNDBITE (Polish) Jerzy Slezakiewicz, Resident of Warsaw:
"Well, in the Old Town (a district of Warsaw) everything is OK for now. There's nothing more you could want, to keep everything in order - cleanliness, greenery, we have it all."
7. Voters casting votes at voting booths
8. SOUNDBITE (Polish) Elzbieta Zaganczyk, Resident of Warsaw:
"(I voted) To make things better in Poland, maybe, as it is now, it is my patriotic duty to fulfil, so that we can live better."
9. Exterior of polling station, voters walking
10. SOUNDBITE (Polish) Elzbieta Zaganczyk, Resident of Warsaw:
"Well, it's not bad, but it could be even better. Our pensions are not quite what they should be. Well, we'll see."
11. Exterior of polling station
STORYLINE:
Voters across Poland are casting their ballots in local elections Sunday in the first electoral test for the coalition government of Prime Minister Donald Tusk nearly four months since it took power.
Voters will elect mayors as well as members of municipal councils and provincial assemblies, an important exercise in self-governance that is one of the great achievements of the democratic transformation that Poland made when it threw off communism 35 years ago.
In all there are nearly 190,000 registered candidates running for local government positions in the central European nation of 38 million people.
Runoff votes will take place two weeks later, on April 21, in cases where mayoral candidates do not win at least 50% of the vote in Sunday's first round.
Opinion polls released in the days ahead of the vote showed the two largest political formations running neck-and-neck: Tusk's Civic Coalition, an electoral coalition led by his centrist and pro-European Union Civic Platform party, and Law and Justice, a national conservative party that governed the country from 2015 until last year.
Several other groups trail the two main groups, including the Third Way coalition, the Left and the radical right-wing Confederation party.
Tusk's coalition government, which includes the Third Way and the Left, together won the national election in October. The result amid record turnout spelled the end of eight bumpy years of rule by Law and Justice, which was accused by the European Union of violating democratic standards with its changes to the judicial system and public media.
Tusk won on promises to reverse many of those changes and is trying to implement that program, but it isn't easy. His attempts to restore independence to the judicial system are a long process that will require the passage of new legislation.
A promise to liberalise the strict abortion law is being hampered by conservatives in Tusk’s own coalition.
Local governments have played an important role in the two major crises of recent years, rolling out vaccinations against COVID-19 and helping the huge numbers of Ukrainian refugees who arrived in the country after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Video shot for AP Rafal Niedzielski
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