Partia Demokratyczna - demokraci.pl
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The Democratic Party (Partia Demokratyczna - demokraci.pl) is a social liberal party in Poland, publicly announced on February 28 and formally established on May 9, 2005 as an "enlargement" of the Freedom Union (Unia Wolności), which it legally succeeds. The new party was formed on the initiative of UW chairman Władysław Frasyniuk, together with the economist Jerzy Hausner, until recently a member of the governing post-communist Alliance of the Democratic Left (SLD), and prominent former UW member Tadeusz Mazowiecki. It was since strongly supported, but thus far not yet officially joined, by the prime minister Marek Belka and centrist members of the Alliance of the Democratic Left. Although it attracted considerable media attention and support from many Polish intellectuals, it received only 2.5% of the vote (and no seats in parliament) in the Polish parliamentary election in October, 2005.
| Timeline of Polish liberal parties after 1989 |
| • Citizens Movement 'Democratic Action' /ROAD (1990-1991) • Liberal Democratic Congress /KLD (1990-1994) • Democratic Union /UD (1991-1994) • Freedom Union /UW (1994-2005) • Democratic Party /PD (2005- ) |
On February 29, 2005, Frasyniuk came out with the initiative to merge the UW into a new liberal party to be called "the Democrats", which he presented with Mazowiecki and Jerzy Hausner. Mazowiecki had left the UW in November 2002 after it had left the conservative-Christian democrat European People's Party in favour of the liberal European Liberal Democrat and Reform Party, and entered coalitions with the post-communist Alliance of the Democratic Left (SLD) and the populist peasant Self-Defence party on the local level. Hausner, on the other hand, is an economist with a post-communist background. As minister of economic affairs and employment in the governments of Leszek Miller and Marek Belka, he conceived the so-called Hausner Plan (Plan Hausnera), a programme for liberal reform concerning state-owned business, public administration, and social security. After his reform met with persistent opposition, he left the SLD in a much debated move on 7 February and resigned from office on March 30, 2005. From the beginning, Frasyniuk, Hausner and Mazowiecki appealed to prime minister Marek Belka to join the party. Belka, another former SLD member, had left the party in the early 1990s, but joined Leszek Miller's government as a non-party minister of economic affairs in 2001 before resigning the following year. After an interlude as economic director in the interim coalition administration of Iraq in 2003, Belka returned to Poland to become non-party head of a SLD minority government in 2004. The involvement of Hausner and Belka as prominent post-communists marks a first in Polish politics: For the first time, a political party is created by members of the former communist government and former opposition members. Also, while the UW was a somewhat elitist party appealing mostly to educated and affluent urban voters, the PD is trying to establish itself as a popular party with a broad appeal, which caters for social liberals (Frasyniuk), pragmatic market liberals (Hausner) and centrist Christian democrats (Mazowiecki).
As of 27 May, 2005, the party claims to have 13,000+ members, out of which 8,000 were members of the Freedom Union. It defines itself as, "above all, a group of young people not previously involved in politics, which at the same time is drawing on the best traditions of the liberal-democrat milieu around the Freedom Union" [link]. Despite this statement the party is made of several former politicians, who had run Poland before, as well as including ex-members of SLD who left the party when it faced a corruption crisis.
A manifesto entitled "Development through Democracy" issued by the party in February 2005 was signed by a broad range of Polish intellectuals and artists, including Paweł Huelle (writer), Marek Edelman (physician, last surviving leader of the Warsaw Ghetto Rising), Agnieszka Holland (director), Marek Kondrat (actor), Kazimierz Kutz (director), Jan Miodek (linguist), Daniel Olbrychski (actor), Jerzy Pilch (writer), Henryk Samsonowicz (historian), Jerzy Szacki (sociologist). Lech Wałęsa's son Jarosław Wałęsa also signed the manifesto.
Political statements made by the Democrats include:
- Support for the European constitution in the referendum in October 2005
- Tax cuts, introduction of an 18% flat tax on incomes
- Reduction of non-wage labour costs, tax remissions for business starters
- Creation of new jobs, e.g. through a first-year exemption from social security contributions for graduate entrants
- Appointment of an ombudsman to represent entrepreneurs damnified by fiscal or other authorities
- Increased spending on education
- Studentship funds for rural youth
- Compulsory education starting at age 6 (presently 7), popularisation of instruction in two foreign languages at primary school level
- Improvement and nationwide standardisation of health services
- Establishment of a public hospital network not subject to privatisation
- Reduction in telecommunication costs to facilitate internet access
Criticism
The Democratic Party has attracted criticism from other former oppositionists from communist times, who criticise that the party accepts former members of the post-communist SLD, and strongly opposes the large-scale vetting of officials and politicians (see Bronisław Wildstein) aimed at eliminating former state agents from political life.Persons
- Janusz Onyszkiewicz - chairman, former minister for national defence (1992-1993, 1997-2000)
- Marcin Święcicki - vice chairman
- Wojciech Baluch - vice chairman
- Władysław Frasyniuk - ex-chairman, former chairman of the Freedom Union
- Jerzy Hausner - former minister for economic affairs and employment (previously a member of the Democratic Left Alliance)
- Tadeusz Mazowiecki - honorary chairman (patron), former prime minister
- Marek Belka - ex-prime minister
Members of Polish
none in this term, since 2001Members of
- Olga Teresa Krzyzanowska - caucus vice chairperson
- Dorota Simonides
- Kazimierz Kutz
- Andrzej Jan Wielowieyski - caucus chairman
- Grazyna Ewa Staniszewska (until June 13 2004, elected to the European Parliament)
Members of the
- Bronisław Geremek, historian and politician, ex-minister of foreign affairs
- Jan Kułakowski, journalist, ex Poland-EU negotiator
- Janusz Onyszkiewicz, mathematician and politician, vice president of the European Parliament
- Grażyna Staniszewska, politician, former senator
See also
- Liberalism in Poland
- Liberalism
- Contributions to liberal theory
- Liberalism worldwide
- List of liberal parties
- Liberal democracy
External links
- [Partia Demokratyczna - demokraci.pl] official site
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- Olga Teresa Krzyzanowska - caucus vice chairperson
- Dorota Simonides
- Kazimierz Kutz
- Andrzej Jan Wielowieyski - caucus chairman
- Grazyna Ewa Staniszewska (until June 13 2004, elected to the European Parliament)
Members of the
- Bronisław Geremek, historian and politician, ex-minister of foreign affairs
- Jan Kułakowski, journalist, ex Poland-EU negotiator
- Janusz Onyszkiewicz, mathematician and politician, vice president of the European Parliament
- Grażyna Staniszewska, politician, former senator
See also
- Liberalism in Poland
- Liberalism
- Contributions to liberal theory
- Liberalism worldwide
- List of liberal parties
- Liberal democracy
External links
- [Partia Demokratyczna - demokraci.pl] official site
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
