Catholic Electoral Committee "Fatherland"

Last updated
Catholic Electoral Committee "Fatherland"
Katolicki Komitet Wyborczy "Ojczyzna" (Polish)
Founded13 July 1993
Dissolved20 September 1993
Ideology Christian democracy
Conservatism
Anti-communism
Agrarianism
Factions:
Political Catholicism
Economic nationalism [1]
Political position Centre-right [2] [3]
Members
Colors
  •   Blue
  •   Red

The Catholic Electoral Committee "Fatherland" (Polish : Katolicki Komitet Wyborczy "Ojczyzna", KKWorOjczyzna) was a conservative and Christian democratic electoral alliance in Poland. It consisted of five parties - the Christian National Union (ZChN), Conservative Party (PK), Christian-Peasant Party (SLCh), Party of Christian Democrats (PChD) and the Federation of Polish Entrepreneurship (FPP). [4]

Contents

The coalition was based on the Catholic Electoral Action that participated in the 1991 Polish parliamentary election. In contrast to the 1991 coalition, the Catholic Electoral Committee "Fatherland" downplayed national-Catholicism in favor of more moderate image, and tried to attract centre-right voters. It failed to gain support of the Catholic clergy and tried to develop support bases in parish councils instead. [4] It ultimately failed to cross the 8% electoral threshold for coalitions and gained no seats. It greatly contributed to the fragmentation of centre-right parties in the 1993 election. [5]

History

Catholic Electoral Committee "Fatherland" was founded on the 13th of July 1993 in Gdańsk, brokered by the Archbishop of the Archdiocese of Gdańsk, [6] Tadeusz Gocłowski, with the intentions of garnering the votes of the Roman Catholic faithful. The electoral coalition initially sought to expand by the Polish People's Party – Peasants' Agreement (PSL-PL), however, the Peasant's Agreement rejected joining the coalition due to their resentment of PK leader Aleksander Hall and SLCh leader Artur Balazs. The possibility of the Centre Agreement and Movement for the Republic joining the coalition were also proposed, but quickly dismissed.

The politicians of "Ojczyzna", including the SLCh, counted on the discreet support of the Catholic Church during the election campaign. However, contrary to Ojczyzna's expectations, the Roman Catholic clergy largely refused to endorse any political party in 1993 (though some explicitly condemned the Democratic Left Alliance (SLD) - a notably anticlerical party), largely to the coalition's disadvantage, since, during the campaign, they were hoping to present themselves as defenders of the Catholic Church and protectors of the interests of Catholics. [4]

The Catholic Church had no intention of getting involved in the election campaign. The Polish bishops drafted a pastoral letter that encouraged participation in the elections and stated in it that "bishops and priests do not engage in public party-political discussions, do not stand for parliament and do not participate in the election campaign, but they point out the moral principles and criteria that, in accordance with the teachings of the Church, Catholics should follow when choosing their representatives." [4]

In view of this, the coalition tried to attract Catholic voters without the overt support of the Church by defending the presence of religion in schools, the Concordat with the Holy See adopted at the end of July, and acting in the constitutional debate to guarantee mutual independence. Krzysztof Oksiuta, the head of the electoral staff of "Ojczyzna" and at the same time a politician of the SLCh, also claimed that the coalition received offers of cooperation from lay Catholics during the election campaign: "Parish councils and other Church-related circles themselves are trying to reach us. They are looking for contacts, they come for leaflets. Priests ask us to come to a meeting, and in such cases candidates cooperate with priests". [4]

In the 1993 Polish parliamentary election, the only election the coalition contested, they secured 6.37% of all valid votes. Unlike many other contemporary and future coalitions seeking to bypass the electoral threshold by registering as a party (and thus only needing to acquire 5% of the vote to enter the Sejm), KKW registered as a coalition, and thereby failed to pass the 8% electoral threshold for electoral coalitions, gaining no seats. Their failure to pass the threshold contributed to the SLD's landslide victory in the election.

The coalition received abysmal support in urban areas, and had some support in the countryside instead. It contributed to the fragmentation of the centre-right in the 1993 election and was found to have cost fellow centre-right parties support and seats, which led to accusations of the Catholic Electoral Committee "Fatherland" being a spoiler party. [5]

Ideology

The coalition was classified as centre-right. [2] [3] In contrast to the Catholic Electoral Action from 1991, the Catholic Electoral Committee "Fatherland" tried to downplay its national-Catholic image in favor of a more inclusive coalition. [4]

Amongst its main goals, the Catholic Electoral Committee "Fatherland" listed "an efficient and democratic state", the development of a market economy in Poland and respect for Catholic and patriotic values". The main slogan of the committee was "Poland first" (Polish : Najpierw Polska). Clarifying the meaning of its slogan, the coalition stated: "Our slogan is not directed against anyone, against any country. We stand for Poland as a general interest, and against group and class interests." [4]

Other slogans that were used in the election campaign were: "Free enterprise and private property" and "State for the family". Leaders of the coalition emphasised that a comprehensive programme was being presented, proposing solutions in the social and economic spheres. The committee defined itself as one that is "not afraid of Christian values and want to be a force that clearly represents them". The need to adhere to Catholic moral values was presented as not only the matter of social conservatism, but was also referred to in terms of anti-corruption. [4]

Explaining its economic slogan of "free enterprise and private property", the Catholic Electoral Committee "Fatherland" clarified that it envisions an economic policy aimed at "fighting unemployment, recognition of agriculture and agrifood processing as a strategic direction of economic policy" and proposed a "tax system conducive to economic growth, investment allowances, accessible credit and a reduction in income tax". Amongst the proposals of the party was also low-cost housing and special welfare programs for disabled people. During the campaign, the coalition summed up its economic goals as following:

Electoral results

Sejm

Election year# of
votes
 % of
vote
# of
overall seats won
Government
1993 878,4456.37 (#5)
0 / 460
Extra-parliamentary

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nonpartisan Bloc for Support of Reforms</span> Political party in Poland

The Nonpartisan Bloc for Support of Reforms was an officially nonpartisan organization affiliated with Lech Wałęsa. The party was established in 1993, and became part of Solidarity Electoral Action in 1997.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1995 Estonian parliamentary election</span>

Parliamentary elections were held in Estonia on 5 March 1995. The newly elected 101 members of the 8th Riigikogu assembled at Toompea Castle in Tallinn within ten days of the election. The governing parties were heavily defeated, except for the Reform Party, the successor of Estonian Liberal Democratic Party. The biggest winner was election alliance consisting of Coalition Party and its rural allies, which won in a landslide victory. The alliance won 41 seats, achieving the best result in an Estonian parliamentary election so far as of 2023.

The Solidarity Citizens' Committee, also known as Citizens' Electoral Committee and previously named the Citizens' Committee with Lech Wałęsa, was an initially semi-legal political organisation of the democratic opposition in Communist Poland.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1993 Polish parliamentary election</span>

Parliamentary elections were held in Poland on 19 September 1993. All 460 members of the Sejm and 100 senators of the Senate were elected. The elections were won by the left-wing parties of the Democratic Left Alliance and the Polish People's Party, who formed a coalition government. The coalition was just four seats short of a supermajority.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bogdan Lis</span> Polish trade unionist and businessman

Bogdan Jerzy Lis worked in Port of Gdańsk and Elmor company. Between 1971 and 1972 he was imprisoned for his participation in the anti-governmental coastal cities protests. Although in 1975 he joined the Polish United Workers Party, in 1978 he was one of the founders of the anti-government Free Trade Unions of the Coast.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">History of Solidarity</span> History of the Polish trade union

Solidarity, a Polish non-governmental trade union, was founded on August 14, 1980, at the Lenin Shipyards by Lech Wałęsa and others. In the early 1980s, it became the first independent labor union in a Soviet-bloc country. Solidarity gave rise to a broad, non-violent, anti-Communist social movement that, at its height, claimed some 9.4 million members. It is considered to have contributed greatly to the Fall of Communism.

The history of trade unions in Poland began with the formation of the Trade Union of Mechanical Engineers and Metal Workers in 1869. By 1906, there were over 2,000 trade unions nationally, and many divisions among them.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Catholic Electoral Action</span> Political party in Poland

Catholic Electoral Action, abbreviated as WAK, was a right-wing electoral committee that participated in the 1991 Polish parliamentary election. The committee was formed in October 1990 and consisted of 20 various groupings that split from Solidarity. The committee's members belonged to the National-Catholic and national conservative Christian National Union. Led by Wiesław Chrzanowski, Catholic Electoral Action won 49 seats in the Sejm and 9 seats in Senat during the 1991 poll. The committee claimed support from the Roman Catholic Church and received relatively strong support in rural areas. Following the election's conclusion, the Christian National Union disbanded its nom de guerre Catholic Electoral Action, sitting in parliament under the party's actual name.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">National Party (Poland, 1989)</span> Political party in Poland

The National Party was a political party in Poland which was reactivated in 1989 in Warsaw by Jan Ostoja Matłachowski, Leon Mirecki, Maciej Giertych, Bogusław Jeznach, Bogusław Rybicki and others as the successor to the pre-war National Party. Its first chairman was Stefan Jarzębski. The re-activated SN was officially registered on 21 August 1990.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2014 European Parliament election in Poland</span>

The 2014 European Parliament election in Poland elected the delegation from Poland to the European Parliament. It took place on 25 May 2014. The Polish electorate will elect 51 MEPs, compared to 50 in the 2009 election.. The number of MEPs is a result of the 2013 reapportionment of seats in the European Parliament. This means that Poland will have 6% of the total seats in the European Parliament.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">German Minority Electoral Committee</span> Minority committee in Poland

The German Minority Electoral Committee is an electoral committee in Poland which represents the German minority. Since 2008, its representative has been Ryszard Galla. In the 2023 Polish parliamentary election, Galla lost his seat in the Sejm, leaving the party with no national representation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2019 European Parliament election in Poland</span>

On Sunday 26 May 2019, a vote was held to elect the Polish delegation to the European Parliament. Polish voters elected 52 MEPs, compared to 51 in the 2014 election. The increased number of MEPs is a result of the 2018 reapportionment of seats in the European Parliament. Following the United Kingdom's announcement, that it will participate in elections to the European Parliament on May 23, Poland will continue to be represented by 51 MEPs. The 52nd MEP will take up their mandate immediately after the UK leaves the European Union. Following the announcement of the election results, the National Electoral Commission indicated Dominik Tarczyński from Lesser Poland and Świętokrzyskie will take up the 52nd seat.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Movement for the Republic</span> Political party in Poland

The Movement for the Republic was a Christian-democratic political party in Poland. The party was founded by former members of centrist Centre Agreement who protested the downfall of Jan Olszewski and his cabinet from power. The party aspired to become the leading Christian-democratic party in Poland and contested the 1993 Polish parliamentary election, but it gained no seats as it failed to cross the 5% electoral threshold. The party was also mired by several splits and internal conflicts, which results in the party disintegrating into several smaller parties and formations. In 1995, Movement for Reconstruction of Poland founded by the party's first leader Jan Olszewski, absorbed most members of the party. The RdR dissolved in 1999.

The Coalition for the Republic was a Christian-democratic electoral alliance in Poland. It consisted of several parties - the Movement for the Republic (RdR), Solidarność 80, National Christian Movement "Polish Action", Freedom Party (PW), Upper Silesian Christian Democracy (GChD), Party of Polish Democracy (SDP), Polish People's Christian Forum "Fatherland" ("Ojcowizna") and the Patriotic Forum of Fighting Poland.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Polish Union</span> Political party in Poland

The Polish Union, also known as the Regional Agreement RdR in 1993, was a Christian-democratic centre-right political party in Poland. The party was founded by defectors from Polish Christian-democratic party Movement for the Republic, who left the party over the dispute regarding forming a possible coalition with Centre Agreement, the party that Movement for the Republic was itself a split from. Shortly after being formed, the Polish Union announced an electoral union with the Centre Agreement in June 1993, known as Centre Agreement – Polish Union.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fatherland – Polish List</span> Political party in Poland

The Fatherland – Polish List was an electoral alliance in Poland created by the National Party "Fatherland". It was an electoral bloc that the National Party contested the 1993 Polish parliamentary election with. It unsuccessfully sought an alliance with a far-left agrarian socialist Self-Defence of the Republic of Poland.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">National Party "Fatherland"</span> Political party in Poland

The National Party "Fatherland" was a political party in Poland was formed in March 1992 as a result of a split in the National Party (1989). The party leaders were Bogusław Rybicki and Bogusław Jeznach. The newspaper of the party was the weekly magazine "Ojczyzna". National Party "Fatherland" pursued a coalition with left-wing populist and nationalist parties such as the Self-Defence of the Republic of Poland, but was unsuccessful in doing so. The party participated in the 1993 Polish parliamentary election, creating an electoral committee Fatherland - Polish List. However, it failed to win any seats, earning 15.958 votes, which amounted to 0,12% of the popular vote. The party rapidly declined after 1993, and in 1996 it dissolved to join a right-wing National Democratic Party.

The Movement for the Republic – Patriotic Camp was a political party in Poland. It was a party that split from the Movement for the Republic (RdR), with the split being caused by differences of opinion in regards to the party's position and possible cooperation with the President Lech Wałęsa. The RdR–OP was led by Romuald Szeremietiew who supported cooperation with the President, and was narrowly elected the leader of RdR in 1993. However, the party leadership annulled the results of the election, and elected Olszewski in the name of Szeremietiew, prompting the split. The party was a right-leaning movement and was strongly supportive of not only the President Lech Wałęsa, but also the efforts to form a united centre-right front against the post-communist left in Poland.

The Alternative Social Movement was coalition of Polish political parties formed on 18 March 2001 in Warsaw for the 2001 Polish parliamentary election. The grouping was formed from a merger of Confederation of Independent Poland - Patriotic Camp led by Michał Janiszewski, Tomasz Karwowski, and Janina Kraus, together with a group of politicians originating from the Christian National Union (ZChN), including Henryk Goryszewski and Mariusz Olszewski. The coalition was also joined by the Free Trade Union 'August 80' Confederation, led by Daniel Podrzycki and Bogusław Ziętek. The Alternative Social Movement was registered as a political party, and its members mainly became the activists of August 80.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Homeland Patriotic Movement</span> Political party in Poland

The Homeland Patriotic Movement was a right-wing electoral coalition created for the 1998 Polish local elections. It was a coalition of numerous right-wing formations as well as an environmentalist party and left-wing trade unions, and sought to present a right-wing alternative to the centre-right Christian-democratic Solidarity Electoral Action. The founding parties of the coalition were a part of the Solidarity Electoral Action in the 1997 Polish parliamentary election, but left it over political and ideological disagreements. The main party in the coalition was the Nonpartisan Bloc for Support of Reforms, renamed to Bloc for Poland. Despite running an aggressive and dynamic campaign, the coalition finished 6th and won 3.19% of the popular vote, winning 256 council seats in total, including 2 out of 855 seats in the voivodeship sejmiks. The coalition dissolved shortly after the election, but its members continued their cooperation, founding the Alternative Social Movement for the 2001 Polish parliamentary election.

References

  1. "Program i lista kandydatów Wyborczej Akcji Katolickiej w Lublinie". Spuścizna Zarządu Regionu Środkowowschodniego NSZZ "Solidarność" W Lublinie. 1991-08-01. Retrieved 2024-03-29.
  2. 1 2 Łopata, Maryan (25 October 2017). "Preferencje polityczne w wyborach do Sejmu w Małopolsce i na Podkarpaciu na tle porównawczym". Humanitarian Vision (in Polish). 3 (2). Lviv Politechnic Publishing House: 89. W następnej tabeli wymieniono także ugrupowania polityczne, które w skali badanego regionu Galicji Zachodniej zdobyły poparcie przekraczające 5 procent, a właśnie NSZZ "Solidarność" i centroprawicową koalicję Katolicki Komitet Wyborczy "Ojczyzna".[The next table also lists the political groupings which, on the scale of the Western Galicia region surveyed, won support in excess of 5 per cent, and it was the NSZZ "Solidarność" and the centre-right coalition Catholic Electoral Committee "Ojczyzna".]
  3. 1 2 Stodolny, Marek (24 June 2015). Ruch Konserwatywno–Ludowy w III RP (in Polish). Poznań: Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu. p. 161. Rzeczywiście, podczas dwóch tur, trwających przeszło 9 godzin, rozmów polityków partii centroprawicowych powstał wspólny blok wyborczy pod nazwą Katolicki Komitet Wyborczy ,,Ojczyzna".[Indeed, during two rounds of talks by politicians from the centre-right parties, which lasted more than nine hours, a joint electoral bloc was formed under the name Catholic Electoral Committee 'Fatherland'.]
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Stodolny, Marek (24 June 2015). Ruch Konserwatywno–Ludowy w III RP (in Polish). Poznań: Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu. pp. 161–164.
  5. 1 2 Grzegorz Węcławowicz; Andrzej Jarosz; Przemysław Śleszyński (1998). Atlas Warszawy. Wybory parlamentarne 1991 i 1993 (PDF) (in Polish). Vol. 5. Warszawa: Instytut Geografii i Przestrzennego Zagospodarowania PAN. pp. 26–33. ISBN   83-906310-5-9.
  6. Millard, Frances (1994-09-01). "The Polish Parliamentary Election of September, 1993". Communist and Post-Communist Studies. 27 (3): 295–313. doi:10.1016/0967-067X(94)90016-7. JSTOR   45301898 . Retrieved 2024-03-29.