Self-Defense of the Republic of Poland
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| Self-Defense of the Republic of Poland | |
|---|---|
| Image:Samoobrona logo.svg | |
| Leader | Andrzej Lepper |
| Founded | 10 january 1993 |
| Headquarters | Aleje Jerozolimskie 30, 00-024 Warsaw |
| Political ideology | socialism, agrarian populism |
| International affiliation | EUDemocrats |
| Website | http://www.samoobrona.org |
Self-Defence of the Republic of Poland (Polish: Samoobrona Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej, SRP) is a left wing political party and trade union in Poland.
The party is led by Andrzej Lepper. After the 2005 elections, it has 56 out of 460 members of the Polish Sejm, and 3 members of the 100 in the Polish Senate (making it the second largest party in the coalition government after PiS).
Samoobrona came in fourth in the 2004 European Parliament election, having received 10% of the votes; this gave it 6 of the 54 seats reserved for Poland in the European Parliament.
Contents |
[edit] Political program
| Timeline of Polish socialist/social-democratic parties after 1986 |
| • Polish Socialist Party /PPS (1987 - ) • Polish Social Democratic Union /PUS (1990 - 1992) • Social Democracy of the Republic of Poland / SdRP (1990 - 1999) • Democratic-Social Movement /RDS (1991 - 1993) • Labour Union /UP (1992 - ) • Self-Defense (1993 - ) • Alliance of the Democratic Left /SLD (1999 - ) • REASON of Polish Left /RACJA PL (2002 - ) • Social Democratic Party of Poland/SDPL (2004 - ) • Union of the Left /UL (2004 - ) |
The party's views are populist and isolationist. The party wants state-funded agriculture, an increase in government social programs, an end to repayments of the foreign debt, introduction of an additional transaction tax and the use of financial reserves to obtain funding. The party is hostile towards foreign investments.
Poland's June 2003 referendum on membership of the European Union was an uncomfortable experience for Samoobrona. On the one hand, the party's traditional isolationism and euroscepticism led it to call officially for a "no" vote. On the other hand, most political observers believed (correctly) that the Polish people would vote in favour of membership, and as a populist party Samoobrona was unhappy about the likelihood of being on the losing side. In the end, the party fought a rather ambiguous campaign, with its posters carrying the slogan "the decision belongs to you".
In 2005, Samoobrona was a founding member of the EUDemocrats pan-European political party, which professes to unite "centrist" "EU-critical" parties committed to increased democratization.
[edit] History
The party first started in parliamentary elections in 1993, gaining 2.78% votes and failing to enter the Sejm. In the 1995 elections Andrzej Lepper ran for president and gained 1.32% of the votes; in parliamentary elections in 1997, the party took 0.08%. In 2000 Samoobrona organized a campaign of blocking major roads in order to get media attention. Lepper gained 3.05% votes in the presidential elections.
The parliamentary elections in 2001 gave the party 53 seats in the Sejm, with 10.5% support, making it the third largest political force. Although officially a member of the opposition, Samoobrona backed the ruling social democratic Alliance of the Democratic Left (Sojusz Lewicy Demokratycznej) in a number of key votes, giving them the majority needed to stay in power. The party has also marked its presence in the Sejm by unconventional disruptive behavior. Among their numerous exploits there are such diverse incidents as using their own loudspeakers after being cut off for exceeding the permitted time, or claiming that the largest opposition party Citizens' Platform met with members of the Taliban in Klewki (a small village near Olsztyn) to sell them anthrax<ref>[1]</ref>. Several Samoobrona members of parliament were subject to criminal investigations on charges ranging from forgery to banditry.
In the 2005 elections Samoobrona received a total of 56 seats with 11.4% support. Andrzej Lepper ran for president of Poland in the 2005 election. He received third place and 15% of the vote, a great improvement over his past performances. After the elections Samooborona temporarily shelved its most radical demands and somewhat toned down its rhetoric and along with the League of Polish Families entered into a coalition with the center-right Law and Justice party.
[edit] Leaders
- Andrzej Lepper party chairman
[edit] Members of Polish Parliament (Sejm) (2001-2005)
MP, constituency
- Mieczysław Aszkiełowicz, Olsztyn
- Renata Beger, Piła
- Waldemar Borczyk, Sieradz
- Alfred Budner, Konin
- Józef Cepil, Kielce
- Marian Curyło, Tarnów
- Włodzimierz Czechowski, Katowice
- Zbigniew Dziewulski, Siedlce
- Krzysztof Filipek, Siedlce
- Andrzej Grzesik, Częstochowa
- Danuta Hojarska, Gdańsk
- Piotr Kozłowski, Wrocław
- Lech Kuropatwiński, Toruń
- Marian Kwiatkowski, Chełm
- Andrzej Lepper, Koszalin
- Alicja Lis, Krosno
- Jan Łączny, Koszalin
- Wanda Łyżwińska, Radom
- Stanisław Łyżwiński, Piotrków Trybunalski
- Adam Ołdakowski, Elbląg
[edit] Members of European Parliament
Some of the Samoobrona MEPs are sitting in the Union for Europe of the Nations group<ref>http://wiadomosci.gazeta.pl/wiadomosci/1,53600,3735941.html</ref>, the other two belong to the Party of European Socialists group.
- Union for Europe of the Nations:
- Party of European Socialists:
[edit] References
<references />cs:Samoobrona de:Samoobrona fr:Samoobrona Rzeczpospolitej Polskiej lv:Polijas Republikas Pašaizsardzība pl:Samoobrona Rzeczpospolitej Polskiej ru:Самооборона Республики Польша sr:Самоодбрана Републике Пољске


