POLAND-PRESIDENT/DUDA Poland swears in opposition-backed conservative as president
Record ID:
144897
POLAND-PRESIDENT/DUDA Poland swears in opposition-backed conservative as president
- Title: POLAND-PRESIDENT/DUDA Poland swears in opposition-backed conservative as president
- Date: 6th August 2015
- Summary: VARIOUS OF DUDA ATTENDING MASS IN CHURCH
- Embargoed: 21st August 2015 13:00
- Keywords:
- Location: Poland
- Country: Poland
- Topics: General
- Reuters ID: LVA3YAS6HPU3MBEB6XMJRMSL8E6T
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: Andrzej Duda, a youthful lawyer backed by the main opposition party, was sworn in as Poland's president on Thursday (August 6), marking a rightward shift in the EU's largest eastern member state and the start of a potentially awkward cohabitation with the government.
The president has limited powers in Poland but Duda may use his position to press the agenda of the opposition Law and Justice party (PiS) ahead of an October parliamentary election, when it hopes to oust the centrist ruling Civic Platform (PO).
PiS has maintained a strong lead in opinion polls since Duda, 43, unexpectedly defeated PO-backed incumbent Bronislaw Komorowski in Poland's presidential election in May.
In his inaugural speech Duda reiterated his election campaign promises, which include cutting the retirement age, raising the tax-free income threshold and paying child benefits. Though conservative on social and moral issues, PiS favours a bigger state role in the economy than PO.
Experts say the campaign pledges would cost about 300 billion zlotys (50.4 billion pounds) by 2020, or about 3 percent of national output per year. Hours before Duda took the oath of office, the PO-appointed finance minister said Poland could not afford the changes.
As president, Duda -- who becomes Poland's sixth head of state since the fall of communism in 1989 -- can veto government bills and propose his own legislation. He is also head of the armed forces and has a say in foreign policy.
Duda, a strong critic of Russian actions in Ukraine, Poland's eastern neighbour, reiterated on Thursday his calls for stronger NATO security guarantees and an increased presence of the Western military alliance on Polish soil.
"Polish foreign policy, which should not be revolutionised because foreign policy does not like revolutions, needs to be corrected. This correction is the intensifying of activity. This correction is talking about our goals, it is talking about our aspirations, it is presenting our point of view in a calm but decisive and unambiguous manner," Duda told parliament.
"We need to state matters firmly. We need greater guarantees from NATO, not only us as Poland, but the whole central and eastern Europe in the current geopolitical situation, difficult as you perfectly know. We need an expanded presence of NATO in this part of Europe, also in our country," he added.
Earlier this week, Duda said Poland should be a part of peace talks in the Ukraine crisis, a sign of his ambition to increase Warsaw's international role.
PiS also takes a more sceptical approach towards the European Union and joining the euro than PO. In July, Duda's main foreign policy adviser urged a more cautious approach towards European integration.
Instead, Duda hailed a policy of "historical politics" practiced by PiS leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski when he was prime minister between 2006 and 2007, which linked historical events with current foreign policy.
"We have a great history and we have nothing to be ashamed of, on the contrary we should be proud of it. We should say the truth, but we should also fight for the truth in relations with our neighbours because good neighbourly relations, inter-human relations, can only be based on truth. That is why historical politics is needed," he said.
One possible area of contention between Duda and the government is a PO-drafted bill on Swiss franc mortgages.
The bill, approved by parliament on Wednesday (August 5), will allow more than half a million Poles who took out Swiss franc mortgages in the hope of enjoying low interest rates an option to convert their debt into zlotys at the current market rate.
It is a politically sensitive issue as many Poles struggle to repay their loans following a surge in the Swiss franc this year. The government plan could cost Polish lenders $5 billion and banking shares plunged on Thursday.
It is unclear whether Duda will now sign the bill or veto it. During the campaign he proposed a full conversion at a historical rate, a move that could cost lenders up to $17 billion, possibly pushing some of them under water. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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