2005 Polish parliamentary election

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2005 Polish parliamentary election
Flag of Poland.svg
  2001 25 September 2005 2007  

All 460 seats in the Sejm
231 seats were needed for a majority in the Sejm
All 100 seats in the Senate
Turnout40.57%
 First partySecond partyThird party
 
Jaroslaw Kaczynski Sejm 2016a (cropped).JPG
Donald Tusk (6165309851) (cropped).jpg
Andrzej Lepper in his office 2002 (2) (cropped).jpg
Leader Jarosław Kaczyński Donald Tusk Andrzej Lepper
Party PiS PO SRP
Leader since18 January 20031 June 200310 January 1992
Leader's seat 19 – Warsaw I 25 – Gdansk 40 – Koszalin
Last election44 seats, 9.5%65 seats, 12.7%53 seats, 10.2%
Seats won15513356
Seat changeIncrease2.svg 111Increase2.svg 68Increase2.svg 3
Popular vote3,185,7142,849,2691,347,355
Percentage27.0%24.1%11.4%
SwingIncrease2.svg 17.5%Increase2.svg 11.4%Increase2.svg 1.2%

 Fourth partyFifth partySixth party
 
Wojciech olejniczak.jpg
Waldemar Pawlak candidate 2010 D crop.jpg
Leader Wojciech Olejniczak Marek Kotlinowski Waldemar Pawlak
Party SLD LPR PSL
Leader since29 May 20055 May 200129 January 2005
Leader's seat 11 – Sieradz 13 – Kraków II 16 – Płock
Last election216 seats, 41%38 seats, 7.9%42 seats, 9%
Seats won553425
Seat changeDecrease2.svg 161Decrease2.svg 4Decrease2.svg 17
Popular vote1,335,257940,762821,656
Percentage11.3%8.0%7.0%
SwingDecrease2.svg 29.7%Increase2.svg 0.1%Decrease2.svg 2%

2005 Polish parliamentary election.svg
Seats won by Sejm District

Government before election

Belka cabinet
SLDUP

Government after election

Marcinkiewicz cabinet
PiSSRPLPR

Parliamentary elections were held in Poland on 25 September 2005. [1] Thirty million voters were eligible to vote for all 460 members of the lower house, the Sejm and all 100 members of the upper house, the Senate.

Contents

The election resulted in a sweeping victory for two opposition parties: the right-wing, national-conservative Law and Justice (PiS) and the centre-right, liberal-conservative Civic Platform (PO). The incumbent centre-left government of the Democratic Left Alliance (SLD) was soundly defeated. PiS won 155 seats and PO 133, while the governing SLD was reduced to fourth place with 55 seats, behind Andrzej Lepper's Self-Defence party, which won 56 seats.

Normally, this would have made PiS leader Jarosław Kaczyński Prime Minister. However, he declined the post so as not to prejudice his twin brother Lech's chances for the presidential election held later in October. In his place, Law and Justice nominated Kazimierz Marcinkiewicz for the post. Outgoing Prime Minister Marek Belka failed to win a seat in Łódź.

In the Senate, PiS won 49 seats and PO 34 of the 100 seats, leaving eight other parties with the remaining 17 seats. The SLD won no seats in the Senate.

In the subsequent presidential elections, Lech Kaczyński of the PiS defeated PO leader Donald Tusk.

Background

The 2005 Sejm was elected by proportional representation from multi-member constituencies, with seats divided among parties which gain more than five percent of the votes using the d'Hondt method. On the other hand, the Senate was elected under first-past-the-post bloc voting. This tended to cause the party or coalition which wins the elections to have a larger majority in the Senate than in the Sejm.

In the 2001 elections the SLD and UP won 216 of the 460 seats, and were able to form a government with the support of the Polish People's Party (PSL). The former ruling party, Solidarity Electoral Action (AWS) based on the Solidarity trade union, lost all its seats. In its place several new right-wing parties emerged, such as the PO and the PiS.

After 2003 a variety of factors combined to bring about a collapse of support for the government. Discontent with high unemployment, government spending cuts (especially on health, education and welfare), affairs related to privatizations was compounded by a series of corruption scandals, the most serious of them being Rywin-gate. Prime Minister Leszek Miller resigned in May 2004 and was succeeded by Marek Belka. All opinion polls suggested that the governing SLD-UP coalition would be heavily defeated at these elections and that the right-wing parties would win a large majority. With the expected downfall of the post-communists, the right-wing parties competed mainly against each other.

Contestants

The parties running in this election were mainly the same as in 2001, with the addition of Social Democracy of Poland (a splinter group from the Democratic Left Alliance), and the Democratic Party formed from the Freedom Union (UW) and some SLD dissidents. Both these new parties failed to win seats.

The BBC commented on election day: "The two centre-right parties are both rooted in the anti-communist Solidarity movement but differ on issues such as the budget and taxation. Law and Justice, whose agenda includes tax breaks and state aid for the poor, has pledged to uphold traditional family and Christian values. It is suspicious of economic liberalism. The Citizens Platform strongly promotes free market forces and wants to introduce a flat 15% rate for income tax, corporation tax and VAT. It also promises to move faster on deregulation and privatisation, in order to adopt the euro as soon as possible."

Opinion polls

Results

Powiats won by
# - Civic Platform
# - Law and Justice
# - Polish People's Party
# - Democratic Left Alliance
# - Self-Defense
# - German Minority Wybory sejm 2005 Barry Kent.png
Powiats won by
– Civic Platform
– Law and Justice
– Polish People's Party
– Democratic Left Alliance
– Self-Defense
– German Minority

Had the two leading parties been able to form a coalition as expected, it would have had 63 percent of seats in the Assembly, just short of the two-thirds supermajority required to carry out constitutional reform. Instead however, PiS formed a coalition with three other parties, SRP, PSL and LPR. The populist and isolationist Self-Defense of the Polish Republic (Samoobrona) slightly improved its representation and became the third largest party ahead of the SLD, which despite losing most of its seats performed slightly better than expected based on opinion polls. However, the party lost all its Senate seats. The League of Polish Families and the Polish People's Party retained their representation. The German minority in Poland is exempt from the requirement of achieving at least 5% of the total vote and retained their two seats.

Sejm

2005 Polish Sejm.svg
PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Law and Justice 3,185,71426.99155+111
Civic Platform 2,849,25924.14133+68
Self-Defence of the Republic of Poland 1,347,35511.4156+3
Democratic Left Alliance 1,335,25711.3155–161
League of Polish Families 940,7627.9734–4
Polish People's Party 821,6566.9625–17
Social Democracy of Poland 459,3803.890New
Democratic Party 289,2762.450New
Janusz Korwin-Mikke Platform 185,8851.570New
Patriotic Movement  [ pl ]124,0381.050New
Polish Labour Party 91,2660.770New
German Minority Electoral Committee 34,4690.2920
Polish National Party 34,1270.290New
Ancestral Home 32,8630.280New
Centre 21,8930.190New
All-Poland Civic Coalition  [ pl ]16,2510.140New
Initiative of the Republic of Poland 11,9140.100New
Polish Confederation – Dignity and Work  [ pl ]8,3530.070New
National Revival of Poland 7,3760.060New
German Minority of Silesia5,5810.0500
Labour Party 1,0190.010New
Social Rescuers9820.010New
Total11,804,676100.004600
Valid votes11,804,67696.40
Invalid/blank votes440,2273.60
Total votes12,244,903100.00
Registered voters/turnout30,229,03140.51
Source: Nohlen & Stöver

By constituency

Although PiS and PO were the clear winners, their vote was very unevenly distributed, being overwhelmingly concentrated in the cities, particularly Warsaw and the southern industrial areas around Kraków and Katowice, but also including Gdańsk, Gdynia, Poznań, Wrocław and Szczecin. The only urban centre not to endorse the right was Łódź. The two main parties failed to win a majority in any rural district except Rzeszów in the south. In seven rural districts they polled less the 40 percent of the vote, while in one (Chełm) they polled less than 35 percent. Self-Defence managed to win in four districts. The vote shows the continuing sharp divide in Polish politics between urban voters, who are generally more socially liberal and in favour of free-market economics, and rural voters, who are more socially conservative and economically left-wing.

ConstituencyTurnout PiS PO SRP SLD LPR PSL SDPL PD MN OthersLead
1 – Legnica 36.7524.7724.4112.6515.266.903.853.294.23-4.640.36
2 – Wałbrzych 35.7422.2125.9313.2513.867.256.515.291.71-3.993.72
3 – Wrocław 46.7325.7032.368.4210.006.733.033.984.28-5.506.66
4 – Bydgoszcz 37.9824.7120.8011.7018.666.706.163.111.70-6.463.91
5 – Toruń 35.6922.6718.6418.5911.777.987.055.553.88-3.874.03
6 – Lublin 42.8925.8217.0414.598.0912.3711.364.211.55-4.978.78
7 – Chełm 38.6420.8211.4020.838.3212.3518.323.311.01-3.640.01
8 – Zielona Góra 35.4422.8424.2111.4116.187.637.853.511.99-4.381.37
9 – Łódź 43.6224.6324.308.6314.127.642.135.726.04-6.790.33
10 – Piotrków Trybunalski 39.3123.2615.3321.5611.209.0610.802.821.76-4.211.70
11 – Sieradz 38.1021.3815.0421.8714.866.6412.212.621.63-3.750.49
12 – Chrzanów 42.1134.8821.868.518.5811.486.053.431.77-3.4413.02
13 – Kraków 47.3437.2930.565.057.965.703.133.562.86-3.896.73
14 – Nowy Sącz 45.0737.1721.928.486.0012.698.021.221.53-2.9715.25
15 – Tarnów 42.7633.9320.289.885.9212.649.342.201.20-4.6113.65
16 – Płock 36.0124.2014.4117.8411.946.9415.832.931.75-4.166.36
17 – Radom 40.6725.6015.6219.429.908.0713.282.631.09-4.396.18
18 – Siedlce 41.6925.4612.6218.807.2711.7516.351.871.05-4.836.66
19 – Warsaw I 56.0529.9333.072.3411.535.850.946.504.91-4.933.14
20 – Warsaw II 44.7132.9528.097.347.177.345.462.982.38-6.294.86
21 – Opole 33.4720.5324.2410.5910.396.824.792.802.8912.923.033.71
22 – Krosno 41.1033.7815.4411.839.1613.639.562.281.07-3.2518.34
23 – Rzeszów 44.2438.2016.257.897.3413.0910.242.160.85-3.9821.95
24 – Białystok 38.4128.4615.2512.1612.3111.388.393.821.41-6.8213.21
25 – Gdansk 44.0125.7539.906.739.045.612.733.852.20-4.1914.15
26 – Gdynia 42.8626.8332.739.3911.227.642.972.921.67-4.635.90
27 – Bielsko-Biała 44.4035.7126.556.609.267.903.413.992.91-3.679.16
28 – Częstochowa 38.6227.6824.7813.7310.676.095.704.742.11-4.502.90
29 – Gliwice 35.8128.4333.126.9711.695.341.953.562.44-6.504.69
30 – Rybnik 39.8131.3331.677.6411.657.012.502.561.65-3.990.34
31 – Katowice 41.0431.3334.385.1810.514.971.294.623.38-4.343.05
32 – Sosnowiec 36.4924.2727.21-21.157.253.596.812.64-7.082.94
33 – Kielce 36.5323.7615.3917.2312.336.1614.154.061.31-5.616.53
34 – Elbląg 34.4021.8523.4817.6812.035.589.013.563.09-3.721.63
35 – Olsztyn 34.5422.5924.0811.8014.287.799.443.092.97-3.961.49
36 – Kalisz 38.5320.1321.7216.5513.027.4710.984.591.39-4.151.59
37 – Konin 38.2719.6918.7820.7013.076.2810.194.361.62-5.311.10
38 – Piła 39.5316.9324.7114.7515.827.449.655.841.51-3.357.78
39 – Poznań 47.2325.5537.975.7110.485.402.055.413.73-3.7012.42
40 – Koszalin 35.5720.3321.7622.7813.874.615.254.723.74-2.941.02
41 – Szczecin 38.2623.2428.2111.4714.846.113.845.513.02-3.764.97
Poland40.5726.9924.1411.4111.317.976.963.892.450.294.592.85

Seat distribution by constituency

Constituency PiS PO SRP SLD LPR PSL MN Sum
1 – Legnica 43221--12
2 – Wałbrzych 3311---8
3 – Wrocław 56111--14
4 – Bydgoszcz 43131--12
5 – Toruń 333211-13
6 – Lublin 532122-15
7 – Chełm 313122-12
8 – Zielona Góra 341211-12
9 – Łódź 33121--10
10 – Piotrków Trybunalski 312111-9
11 – Sieradz 323211-12
12 – Chrzanów 42-11--8
13 – Kraków 65-11--13
14 – Nowy Sącz 421-11-9
15 – Tarnów 421-11-9
16 – Płock 3221-2-10
17 – Radom 312111-9
18 – Siedlce 422112-12
19 – Warsaw I 78-31--19
20 – Warsaw II 44111--11
21 – Opole 34211-213
22 – Krosno 421121-11
23 – Rzeszów 731121-15
24 – Białystok 532221-15
25 – Gdańsk 4611---12
26 – Gdynia 46121--14
27 – Bielsko-Biała 43-11--9
28 – Częstochowa 3211---7
29 – Gliwice 4411---10
30 – Rybnik 44-1---9
31 – Katowice 56-1---12
32 – Sosnowiec 33-21--9
33 – Kielce 533212-16
34 – Elbląg 2221-1-8
35 – Olsztyn 331111-10
36 – Kalisz 332211-12
37 – Konin 2231-1-9
38 – Piła 2312-1-9
39 – Poznań 45-1---10
40 – Koszalin 2231---8
41 – Szczecin 44221--13
Total155133565534252460

Senate

2005 Polish Senate.svg
PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Law and Justice 5,020,70420.8049+49
Civic Platform 4,090,49716.9434+32
Democratic Left Alliance 3,114,11812.900–75
League of Polish Families 2,990,09212.397+5
Self-Defence of the Republic of Poland 2,016,8588.353+1
Polish People's Party 1,413,8725.862–2
Democratic Party 683,7992.830New
Social Democracy of Poland 573,5562.380New
Janusz Korwin-Mikke Platform 375,0371.550New
Centre 246,1431.020New
Patriotic Movement  [ pl ]234,0930.970New
Ancestral Home 181,3370.750New
Polish National Party 168,4130.700New
German Minority Electoral Committee 88,8750.370
All-Poland Civic Coalition  [ pl ]65,5610.270New
Initiative of the Republic of Poland 45,7120.190New
Social Rescuers18,4390.080New
Polish Labour Party 11,7650.050
Polish Confederation – Dignity and Work  [ pl ]10,5280.040New
Local lists and independents2,792,57211.575+3
Total24,141,971100.001000
Valid votes11,812,96596.52
Invalid/blank votes426,0543.48
Total votes12,239,019100.00
Registered voters/turnout30,229,03140.49
Source: Nohlen & Stöver

By constituency

No.ConstituencyTotal seatsSeats won
PiS PO LPR SRP PSL Others
1Legnica321
2Wałbrzych211
3Wrocław312
4Bydgoszcz22
5Toruń312
6Lublin321
7Chełm3111
8Zielona Góra3111
9Łódź211
10Piotrków Trybunalski211
11Sieradz321
12Kraków422
13Nowy Sącz211
14Tarnów211
15Płock211
16Radom211
17Siedlce321
18Warsaw422
19Warsaw211
20Opole312
21Krosno22
22Rzeszów3111
23Białystok312
24Gdańsk312
25Gdynia321
26Bielsko-Biała211
27Częstochowa211
28Gliwice211
29Rybnik211
30Katowice3111
31Sosnowiec211
32Kielce321
33Elbląg211
34Olsztyn211
35Kalisz3111
36Konin211
37Piła211
38Poznań211
39Koszalin211
40Szczecin211
Total10049347325
Source: National Electoral Commission

Aftermath

Negotiations between PiS and PO about forming a government collapsed in late October, precipitated by disagreement regarding who would be speaker of the Sejm. On 1 November PiS announced a minority government headed by Kazimierz Marcinkiewicz as Prime Minister. The negotiations were affected by the 9 October presidential election where the PiS candidate Lech Kaczyński (the twin brother of PiS leader Jarosław Kaczyński) was elected; Jarosław Kaczyński had promised that he would not become the Prime Minister if his brother wins the election. The constitutional requirement to form a government within a set time period also heated up the coalition negotiations.

A major stumbling block in PiS-PO government negotiations was the latter's insistence on receiving the Interior portfolio, as to prevent one party from controlling all three of the "power" ministries (Security, Justice and Interior) that manage police and security services. The PO also opposed a "tactical alliance" between the PiS and the Self-Defense (Samoobrona) party, which shared eurosceptic and populist sentiments, although differing on economic policy. The election campaign, in which PiS and PO mainly competed against each other rather than parties to their left, accentuated differences and created an antagonistic relationship between the two parties.

The PiS minority government depended on the support of the radical Samoobrona party and the hard-right League of Polish Families (LPR) to govern, a situation that made many of those hoping for a PiS-PO coalition uneasy. On 5 May 2006 PiS formed a coalition government with Samoobrona and LPR.

In July 2006, Marcinkiewicz tendered his resignation following reports of a rift with PiS party leader Kaczyński. Kaczyński formed a new government and was sworn in on 14 July as prime minister.

The SLD's severe defeat sent the party into a sharp decline from which it has never fully recovered; it lost all of its remaining seats in 2015 though it regained some ground in 2019 as part of Lewica, and the Polish left-wing would not govern until New Left, formed from the merger of the SLD and Spring, entered Tusk's third cabinet as a junior coalition partner following the 2023 parliamentary election.

The 2005 election proved to be a realigning election in Polish politics, as Law and Justice and Civic Platform (and presidential candidates supported by them) have finished in top two of every election since.

Further reading

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References

  1. Dieter Nohlen & Philip Stöver (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p1491 ISBN   978-3-8329-5609-7