“At the end of May, my role in the deregulation team will come to an end,” said Rafał Brzoska, the entrepreneurs’ representative for simplifying regulations. In his view, Polish rules favor foreign corporations more than domestic businesses. “We’re merely takers of Brussels‑imposed regulations that curb our competitiveness,” stressed the InPost chief.
In February this year, Prime Minister Donald Tusk asked Brzoska to lead a task force to draft a package of deregulation proposals. Brzoska agreed, and by March the government had already received the first tranche of measures. The team ultimately hopes to table about 400 proposals to streamline regulations.
Yet Brzoska has now declared that his self‑imposed “100 days of public‑interest work” under the initiative he founded, “SprawdzaMY” (“WeCheck”), are over; he is returning to his day‑to‑day corporate duties.
What did he uncover?
The entrepreneur’s statement triggered a wave of online commentary. Users and pundits suspect his exit may stem from frictions between the task force and the government.
“The prime minister cancelled this week’s deregulation event. Brzoska barely got started and is finishing earlier than planned,” wrote Grzegorz Wszołek on X.
“Brzoska has had enough of working for Tusk. I’m not surprised. He’s probably also tired of getting Community Notes on nearly every post,” remarked Paweł Rybicki.
Commentator Grzegorz Burzyński concluded that Brzoska “found out that Brussels is behind it all.”