Five parties would enter the Sejm – without the Polish People’s Party (PSL) and Poland 2050, but with the Left (Lewica) and the Confederation of the Polish Crown. Such a picture of the possible composition of the Polish parliament emerges from the latest IBRiS poll conducted for Rzeczpospolita.
According to the newest IBRiS survey, five political groups would make it into the Sejm.
Support for the Civic Coalition was declared by 28.7% of voters. In second place is the Law and Justice party with 28.1%. The Confederation ranks third with 13.4%. Just behind is the Left with 7.6%, followed by the Confederation of the Polish Crown with 5.7%. Grzegorz Braun’s formation closes the pool of parties that surpass the electoral threshold, allowing entry into the Sejm, Rzeczpospolita noted.
Falling short of entering the lower house would be: the Polish People’s Party, with 4.1% support, the Together party (Razem) with 2.6%, and Szymon Hołownia’s Poland 2050 with barely 1% support.
In the poll published on September 4, the Law and Justice party had 30.6% support, Donald Tusk’s formation 29.9%, the Confederation 15.1%, and the Left 8%.
