Law and Justice
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Law and Justice (Prawo i Sprawiedliwość) (PiS) is a Polish central-right political party, established in 2001, by the Kaczyński brothers: Lech, the former justice minister and the current mayor of the capital, Warsaw, and Jarosław, who is the President of the party. A large proportion of party members came from various small member parties of the now defunct Akcja Wyborcza Solidarnosc coalition.
In the 2001 elections PiS gained 44 (of 460) seats in the lower chamber of the Polish Parlaiment (Sejm) with 9.5% votes. In the 2004 European Parliamentry elections, the party came in third, receiving 13% of votes and 7 of 54 seats reserved for Poland in the European Parliament, as part of the Union for a Europe of Nations.
For most of 2004 and 2005, opinion polls put PiS at the second or third position, with the more moderately conservative Citizens Platform (Platforma Obywatelska) being in the lead. For a few years, a coalition of PO and PiS has been believed to be most likely to form the government after the upcoming parliamentary election. In March 2005, PiS unexpectedly overtook its rival PO. A recent poll shows them taking the lead with 24%, gaining 8% percentage points, while PO drops slightly to 20% [1] (http://bi.gazeta.pl/im/5/2657/m2657895.jpg).
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Political program
PiS demands better public safety and a reform of the legal system to fight crime more effectively - including advocacy of the death penalty. Its rhetoric is particular aggressive about fighting corruption. The party supported Poland's European Union accession, but projects a more Eurosceptic and more populist overall image than PO does. The party's public profile is dominated by two popular politicians, the brothers Lech and Jaroslaw Kaczynski.
Leaders
- Lech Kaczynski (Warszawa) - president-mayor of Warsaw
- Jaroslaw Kaczynski (Warszawa) - party chairman
- Ludwik Dorn (Pruszków) - party vice chairman
- Marek Jurek (Rzeszów) - party vice chairman
- Adam Lipinski (Jelenia Góra) - party vice chairman
- Kazimierz Ujazdowski (Wroclaw) - party vice chairman
Members of Polish Parliament (Sejm)
MP, constituency
- Anna Borucka-Cieślewicz, Poznań, from 2004
- Wojciech Borzuchowski, Białystok
- Tadeusz Cymański, Gdańsk
- Andrzej Diakonow, Opole
- Ludwik Dorn, Warszawa
- Jacek Falfus, Bielsko-Biała
- Józef Fortuna, Chrzanów
- Szymon Giżyński, Częstochowa
- Przemysław Gosiewski, Kielce
- Wojciech Jasiński, Płock
- Marek Jurek, Rzeszów
- Jarosław Kaczyński, Warszawa
- Mariusz Kamiński, Warszawa
- Elżbieta Kruk, Lublin
- Piotr Krzywicki, Sieradz
- Marek Kuchciński, Krosno
- Adam Lipiński, Legnica
- Andrzej Liss, Gdańsk
- Kazimierz Marcinkiewicz, Gorzów Wielkopolski - Zielona Góra
- Barbara Marianowska, Tarnów
- Tomasz Markowski, Bydgoszcz
- Antoni Mężydło, Toruń
- Hanna Mierzejewska, Warszawa
- Marek Muszyński, Wrocław
- Maria Nowak, Katowice
- Ryszard Nowak, Nowy Sącz
- Bolesław Piecha, Rybnik
- Marian Piłka, Siedlce
- Jerzy Polaczek, Katowice
- Paweł Poncyljusz, Warszawa
- Jacek Sauk, Szczecin
- Małgorzata Stryjska, Poznań
- Marek Suski, Radom
- Wojciech Szarama, Gliwice
- Aleksander Szczygło, Olsztyn
- Jolanta Szczypińska, Gdynia
- Bartłomiej Szrajber, Warszawa
- Kazimierz Ujazdowski, Wrocław
- Zbigniew Wassermann, Kraków
- Elżbieta Więcławska-Sauk, Łódź
- Artur Zawisza, Warszawa
- Jarosław Zieliński, Białystok
- Zbigniew Ziobro, Kraków
Members of Polish Senate
Members of European Parliament
- Adam Bielan, politician
- Anna Fotyga, international trade expert, vicepresident-mayor of Gdansk 2002-2004
- Mieczysław Janowski, doctor of technical sciences, local activist
- Michał Kamiński, journalist and politician
- Marcin Libicki, arts historian and politician
- Wojciech Roszkowski historian, professor of politics
- Konrad Szymański, lawyer, journalist and politician
The PiS MEPs belong to the Union for a Europe of Nations caucus.
External link
- Official website (http://www.pis.org.pl/english/)
See also: