Poles are increasingly divided in the assessment of the government, and the position of Prime Minister Donald Tusk becomes the subject of a heated public debate. The latest survey conducted by United Surveys for Virtual Poland sheds fresh light on social sentiments, showing how deep divisions are in the future of the current head of government. The results are clear: Almost all second polled advocates the resignation of the Prime Minister. This is simply a signal that the ruling coalition cannot ignore, especially in the context of falling support and interior tensions.
The survey asks a direct question about Donald Tusk's future as Prime Minister, and Poles' answers paint a image of a society divided almost in half. However, analysis of the results, taking into account political preferences, shows where the Prime Minister can inactive number on unwavering support and where his position is the weakest. These data are crucial for knowing the current political dynamics in Poland and possible scenarios for the coming months.
The results are conclusive. Almost all another Pole behind Prime Minister's resignation
On the question, ‘Do you think that Donald Tusk should resign and halt acting as Prime Minister of the Government?’, the answers of Poles show clear polarisation. A full of 48.6% of respondents believe that the Prime Minister should step down. This group is not uniform – 38.2% of those surveyed chose the answer "Definitely yes", indicating a strong and unequivocal conviction of the request for change. An additional 10.4% responded "as a substance of fact", which besides feeds the camp of resignation supporters.
On the another side of the barricade there is simply a somewhat smaller but inactive very many group of Poles. Donald Tusk's opposing resignations totalled 43.8% of respondents. In this group, 22.9% chose the answer "perhaps not", and 20.9% chose "certainly not". This means that more than 1 5th of Poles are absolutely convinced that Donald Tusk should stay in his position. A tiny but crucial percentage, 7.6% of respondents, have no opinion and have chosen the answer "I don't know/difficult to say". These figures show that while support for the government is falling, its leader inactive has strong back-ups.
Iron electorate with a wall behind Tusk. Coalition voters inactive loyal
A completely different image emerges erstwhile we look at the responses of organization voters forming the current ruling coalition (Citizen's Platform, Left, PSL, Poland 2050). There is almost complete agreement in this group that Donald Tusk should proceed his mission. As many as 85% of the ruling coalition voters are opposed to the Prime Minister's resignation. It's a powerful mandate of trust from your own electorate.
Detailed data show that 56% of them replied "no" and a further 29% "no". Which is highly interesting, in this group, no 1 has chosen the answer “Definitely yes”. This shows that even if certain doubts arise, they do not translate at the extremist request of changing the leader. Despite this, 13% of the coalition voters replied "perhaps so", which could be a informing signal to the government. It is simply a tiny but notable group that is not full satisfied. Only 2% of the ruling camp voters had no opinion on this issue.
The opposition has no doubt. PiS and Confederates voters request change
The moods among opposition voters, the Law and Justice and the Confederacy, are a mirror reflection of support for the Prime Minister in the ruling camp. Here, the unanimous request for resignation dominates. As many as 80% of opposition voters believe Donald Tusk should resign as Prime Minister. This is simply a consequence that leaves no illusions about the assessment of the current government by its political opponents.
In this group extremist attitudes dominate – up to 72% of respondents replied "Definitely yes", and an additional 8% chose the option "more or little so". It shows that eIe
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Poles assessed the Prime Minister thoroughly. Almost half want Tusk to resign! We have the poll results.