The Greens (Poland) - Biblioteka.sk

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The Greens (Poland)
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The Greens
Zieloni
SecretaryWaldemar Kamiński[1]
SpokespersonMichał Suchora[2]
Co-Chairs
Founded6 September 2003 (2003-09-06)
Headquarters
Youth wingYoung Greens
IdeologyGreen politics
Progressivism
Pro-Europeanism
Political positionCentre-left to left-wing
National affiliationCivic Coalition
Senate Pact 2023 (for 2023 Senate election)
European affiliationEuropean Green Party
International affiliationGlobal Greens
European Parliament groupEuropean Greens–European Free Alliance
Colours  Green
Sejm
3 / 460
Senate
0 / 100
European Parliament
1 / 51
Regional assemblies
1 / 552
Website
partiazieloni.pl Edit this at Wikidata

The Greens (Polish: Zieloni) is a political party in Poland.

It was formed in 2003 under the name "Greens 2004" and formally registered itself in February 2004. It supports principles of green politics,[3] and it is positioned on the centre-left[4] and leans towards the left-wing.[5] The party is an international member of the Global Greens, European member of European Green Party and cooperates with the European Greens–European Free Alliance in the European Parliament.

History

Logo of The Greens until November 2022

The party was established in 2003 by activists of several social movements. Among its founding members were environmentalists, feminists, LGBT people and anti-war activists. The first political campaign of the emerging party concerned the Polish European Union membership referendum, the Greens campaigned for a "yes" vote.

Greens 2004 took part in the movement against the Iraq War in 2003 and participated in Equality Parades and other social protests in the time of "Fourth Republic" (2005–2007). Since 3 March 2013, the official name of the party is Partia Zieloni (The Greens), while Greens 2004 is a historical name and can still be used.

During the late 2000s and the early 2010s, the party cooperated with various socialist parties in the elections.

The party was represented in the Sejm between 2014 and 2015 by Anna Grodzka (she was elected as Palikot's Movement member in 2011). By the mid-2010s, the party lost many members (e. g. Marcelina Zawisza), who formed new party called Razem (Together).

Since 2018, the party began to cooperate with Civic Platform and Modern parties. In 2019, as part of Civic Coalition, it won three seats in Sejm. These representatives became members of Civic Coalition parliamentary group. On 8 March 2023, Klaudia Jachira, previously independent representative within Civic Platform, joined The Greens.[6]

Election results

Sejm

Election year Leader # of
votes
% of
vote
# of
overall seats won
+/– Government
2005 Magdalena Mosiewicz,
Dariusz Szwed
459, 380 3.9 (#7)
0 / 460
New Extra-parliamentary
As part of the Social Democracy of Poland committee which did not win any seats.
2011 1,184,303 8.2 (#5)
0 / 460
Steady Extra-parliamentary
As part of the Democratic Left Alliance committee which won 27 seats in total.
2015 Małgorzata Tracz,
Adam Ostolski
1,147,102 7.6 (#5)
0 / 460
Steady Extra-parliamentary
As part of the United Left which did not win any seats.
2019 Małgorzata Tracz,
Marek Kossakowski
5,060,355 27.4 (#2)
3 / 460
Increase 3 Opposition
As part of the Civic Coalition which won 134 seats in total.
2023 Urszula Zielińska,
Przemysław Słowik
6,629,402 30.7 (#2)
3 / 460
Steady Coalition government
As part of the Civic Coalition which won 157 seats in total.

Electoral History

European Parliament election of 2004

In the 2004 European Parliament election, the Greens received 0.27% of the votes.

Polish presidential election of 2005

In the 2005 presidential election, the Greens supported Marek Borowski, the chairman of the SDPL, who received 10.33% of the votes.

Polish local elections of 2006

In the 2006 local elections, the Greens structured themselves and decided on the formula for the start of elections (because the party's national authorities rejected the invitation to the alliance of the Left and Democrats). The independent list of the Greens in Warsaw received 11 210 votes (1.68%) and 7th place out of 14. Less than 1% of support was obtained in Wrocław and Gdańsk by the local committees co-created by the Greens with Young Socialists. In other cities, people associated with the party were candidates from local, mainly non-party lists or the Left and Democrats coalition.

Polish parliamentary election of 2007

In the 2007 parliamentary election, the Greens contested one district in the Senate.

European Parliament election of 2009

In February 2009, the Greens formed a coalition called Alliance for the Future (Porozumienie dla Przyszłości - CentroLewica) with the social liberal Democratic Party and the social democratic SDPL, forming a common list for the 2009 European Parliament election.

Polish presidential election of 2010

In the 2010 presidential election, the Greens supported Grzegorz Napieralski based on the analysis of the programs of the most important candidates. The SLD candidate obtained the highest score in the Green Index ranking: 78 on a scale from -200 to +200 points. In the second round, the party members encouraged to vote, but they did not support any of the candidates, pointing to their conservatism and economic neoliberalism.

Polish local elections of 2010

In the 2010 local elections, members of the Greens ran in most cases from the lists of Democratic Left Alliance. In these elections, the Greens won five seats in local councils and regional parliaments.

Polish parliamentary election of 2011

In the 2011 parliamentary election, representatives of the party again found themselves on the lists of the Democratic Left Alliance, but they did not obtain any seats in the Sejm. The Green candidates themselves gained 23 421 votes, which gave 0.16% of the votes. The only one of the Greens was their chairman Dariusz Szwed opening the list in the Chrzanów constituency, in which he obtained 3 842 votes.

European Parliament election of 2014

In the 2014 European Parliament election, the Greens formed their own Election Committee of the Greens. The representatives of the Women's Party, the Polish Socialist Party and Young Socialists have announced the start of the Green Committee's lists. The Committee registered lists in five districts. The Committee of the Greens obtained 22 221 votes (0.32%) in the elections, taking the 10th place (ahead of, among others, the Direct Democracy committee, whose lists were registered in six districts).

Polish local elections of 2014

In the 2014 local elections, the Greens issued their own letters to the city council in Warsaw and Wrocław, in Warsaw, issuing Joanna Erbel as their own candidate for the city's presidency, and in Wrocław supporting the SLD candidate. In Kraków, together with trade unions and city movements, they co-founded the Kraków Against the Olympic Committee. In Opole, the current councilor of the Greens, Beata Kubica (elected in 2010 from the SLD list) ran for the city council from the list of German Minorities. In the Lubuskie voivodeship, the Greens together with the Social Justice Movement, trade unions and civic movements, co-founded the Nowy Ład Committee in the elections to the regional council. The Greens also issued a dozen or so candidates in the One-National Electoral Circumscriptions in Poland.

As a result of the elections, the independent lists of the Green Party in Warsaw received 2.55% of votes to the city council. A similar result (2.48%) was received by the candidate for the mayor of the city, Joanna Erbel. The Wrocław Green list received 1.97% of the votes to the city council. In Kraków, the Kraków Against the Olympic Committee, co-created by the Greens, received 6.7% of the votes, which did not translate into mandates, with Tomasz Leśniak receiving 4.84% of the votes in the elections for the city president. The Electoral Committee New Deal, co-created by the Greens, received 0.62% of support in the elections to the Lubusz Regional Assembly (it was the 10th result from among 11 committees). No Green candidate for a councilor in the single-member district has obtained a seat.

Polish presidential election of 2015

In the 2015 presidential election, the candidate for the party was the deputy Anna Grodzka, who, however, did not collect the required number of 100 000 signatures.

Polish parliamentary election of 2015

Greens joined the Zjednoczona Lewica (United Left) electoral alliance for the 2015 parliamentary election in July 2015. In the election the alliance received 7.6% of the vote, below the 8% electoral threshold leaving the alliance with no parliamentary representation. It was officially dissolved in February 2016.

Polish local elections of 2018

In the 2018 local elections, the Greens, without any electoral alliance, managed to obtain the highest ever result in their party history of 1.15% of the votes,[7] with their highest result as a percentage in Lubusz voivodeship (2.62%), and the highest local Gmina result being in Gmina Żary (10.0%).

This concludes that the Greens achieved better overall results in Western Poland areas which are near to the borders of Germany.

Sejm and European Parliament elections of 2019

On 6 November 2018, at a press conference, the Greens officially announced preparations for the 2019 elections both at the national and European level. Announced at the end of July 2019, the party will participate in the 2019 Polish parliamentary election as part of the Civic Coalition.[8]

Principles and policies

The framework for Green policies, called The Green Manifesto, was adopted by the founding congress of the party on 6 and 7 September 2003. The Green Manifesto outlined the principles of green politics in seven areas: social justice and solidarity, civil society and reclaiming the state for citizens, environmental protection and sustainable development, gender equality, respect for national, cultural and religious diversity, protecting minority rights, and non-violent conflict resolution.[9]

At the 4th Congress in April 2011, the Greens 2004 adopted elaborated policy documents concerning the principles of social policy, education policy, and health care policy.[10]

Current policies

The current official policies approved during the party's XI Congress:[11]

"Protection of Earth resources is our obligation"

  1. The total departure from obtaining energy from oil, coal and other fossil fuels and obtaining it in at least 50% from renewable energy sources by 2030.
  2. Resignation from plans for the construction of nuclear power plants.
  3. Supporting efforts to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions by at least 40% by 2030 compared to 1990 levels.
  4. Increase energy efficiency by 45% by 2050 to combat air pollution, energy poverty and combating climate change.
  5. Completion of production and sale of new combustion vehicles by 2030 and replacement with non-standard vehicles.
  6. Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=The_Greens_(Poland)
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