Reuters
Prime Minister Donald Tusk said yesterday that he would seek a confidence vote from parliament after secret recordings of senior officials plunged Poland into its worst political crisis for years.
“I’m ending my statement with a motion to the parliament speaker to conduct the confidence vote as soon as possible,” Tusk said, over a week after news magazine Wprost started publishing the tapes.
Tusk’s ruling Civic Platform (PO) and its junior partner Poland’s Peasants Party (PSL) hold the necessary majority to secure a confidence vote with 235 MPs – four above the required parliamentary threshold.
“There’s no doubt that PSL MPs will stand shoulder to shoulder for stability,” PSL head and Poland’s deputy prime minister Janusz Piechocinski said.
Tusk said earlier this week said he would not be forced by the illegal surveillance into changing his cabinet.
“There are two possibilities. One is election ... but between elections there’s (the question of) a parliamentary majority,” Tusk told MPs yesterday.
Dissolving parliament, the trigger for an early election, requires two-thirds of the votes in parliament, but no bloc controls that many seats.
“Starting tomorrow in Brussels I need to be certain that I’m holding a majority,” Tusk said. “Without this mandate I will not be effective.”
The Polish premier will go to Brussels to attend the first European Council meeting after European Union elections today and tomorrow.
Poland hopes to secure more say in the new EU structures.
The secret recordings were made over several months at locations including high-end Warsaw restaurants.
In tapes made public so far, central bank governor Marek Belka and Interior Minister Bartlomiej Sienkiewicz were recorded discussing the removal of another minister and ways to put pressure on a businessman.
Belka and Sienkiewicz have said their words were taken out of context and they deny doing anything illegal.
In another recording, Poland’s Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski blasted the Polish-US alliance and said British Prime Minister David Cameron’s policy on Europe was either reckless or incompetent.
In his speech, Tusk reiterated that he believed a criminal group was behind the recordings, aiming to undermine Poland’s position and influence its commodity and energy markets.
There are no comments.
Saying goodbye is never easy, especially when you are saying farewell to those that have left a positive impression. That was the case earlier this month when Canada hosted Mexico in a friendly at BC Place stadium in Vancouver.
Some 60mn primary-school-age children have no access to formal education
Lekhwiya’s El Arabi scores the equaliser after Tresor is sent off; Tabata, al-Harazi score for QSL champions
The Yemeni Minister of Tourism, Dr Mohamed Abdul Majid Qubati, yesterday expressed hope that the 48-hour ceasefire in Yemen declared by the Command of Coalition Forces on Saturday will be maintained in order to lift the siege imposed on Taz City and ease the entry of humanitarian aid to the besieged
Some 200 teachers from schools across the country attended Qatar Museum’s (QM) first ever Teachers Council at the Museum of Islamic Art (MIA) yesterday.
The Supreme Judiciary Council (SJC) of Qatar and the Indonesian Supreme Court (SCI) have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on judicial co-operation, it was announced yesterday.
Sri Lanka is keen on importing liquefied natural gas (LNG) from Qatar as part of government policy to shift to clean energy, Minister of City Planning and Water Supply Rauff Hakeem has said.