Polish Election Headed To Run-Off
Presidential Race Centered On Welfare State Protections, Economics
-
Donald Tusk, presidential candidate from the Civic Platform party raises hands as exit polls are announced just after the vote in the Sunday presidential election ended, in Warsaw, Poland. (AP)
-
Fast Facts Poland Learn about the people, economy and history.
One of the quirks of this election has to do with appearance. Kaczynski has an identical twin brother, Jaroslaw, whose Law and Justice party won the parliamentary election. As chairman of the party, Jaroslaw was expected to become prime minister, but he instead named a little-known party member to hold that post, a move aimed at strengthening his brother's bid for the presidency.
The brothers calculated that Poles do not want two men they can barely tell apart holding the two top posts.
The two, now 56, won fame at age 12 with the 1962 in a hit movie about a pair of troublemakers who try to get rich by stealing the moon and selling it. That was the end of their film career.
"The movie seems written just for the two of them — they are naughty, troublesome and ready to fight, just like now," Zuzanna Szwed, a 27-year-old Tusk voter said after watching a special screening in Warsaw of the movie Sunday.
The Kaczynskis were later active in the anti-communist Solidarity trade union movement.
After the exit poll was released, both Tusk and Kaczynski expressed hope they would emerge as the winner.
"I am proud of this result, I am proud of Poland," a smiling and relaxed-looking Tusk said to chanting supporters. "In the coming two weeks Poles will look carefully at who we really are and this is my chance. ... This is a victory."
Kaczynski said he was not giving up yet, and that he too would use the next two weeks to win over voters.
"I am certain that in the long run ... we will win," Kaczynski said. "The vision of a Poland of solidarity is more attractive to millions of Poles, to millions of Polish families, than a vision of a liberal Poland."
Among a field of 12, Andrzej Lepper, leader of the farm-based Self-Defense party, came third with 13.2 percent, according to the exit poll. Marek Borowski, a former communist, had 10.2 percent, a showing that was slightly better than opinion polls had predicted.
The elimination of 10 candidates made it difficult to predict how the final result would play out. It seemed likely that Kaczynski would benefit the most, as he could pick up support from Lepper voters, who also see a strong role for the state in job creation.
He might also appeal to those on both the right and left fringes, as opposed to Tusk, who is considered a moderate and attracts centrist voters.
But Michal Kaminski, one of Kaczynski's main political strategists, denied that Kaczynski would fish for support at the edges of the political spectrum, and said that he would try to appeal to all voters — even those who voted for Tusk on Sunday.
"Kaczynski is looking for every Polish vote and he will appeal to those voters who today voted for Donald Tusk," Kaminski told The Associated Press at the party headquarters.
©MMV, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Mike Huckabee on GOP "rock stars," 2012, health care reform and more.




