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Far-right and right-wing populist political parties and organizations fuel fear and hatred towards Islam and Muslims. [16] Hate crimes such as arson and physical violence have occurred in Poland (despite having a Muslim population of only 0.1%, that is 30,000 out of 38 million).
Poland’s hard-right Confederation party opened its electoral campaign convention as if it were a rock concert, with a singer riding up on a motorcycle, its engine revving, and a pyrotechnic show ...
LPR was created just before parliamentary elections in 2001 as a far-right nationalist party. In 2004 European Parliament elections, LPR received 15.2%, which gave it 10 out of 54 seats, making it the second-largest party in Poland in that election. In 2005 elections, LPR received 8% of votes and formed a government coalition with PiS and SRP.
Law and Justice (Polish: Prawo i Sprawiedliwość [ˈpravɔ i ˌspravjɛˈdlivɔɕt͡ɕ] ⓘ, PiS) is a right-wing populist and national-conservative political party in Poland. The party is a member of European Conservatives and Reformists Group. Its chairman had been Jarosław Kaczyński since 18 January 2003.
The New Hope has been described as a right-wing [14] and far-right party. [15] Regarding social issues, the party is conservative, [16] and regarding economic issues, it is right-libertarian. [17] It has been also described as right-wing populist. [18] It has expressed hard Eurosceptic views towards the European Union. [19]
Poland’s populist Law and Justice Party has lost a confidence vote to end its authoritarian eight-year stint in power, national news agency PAP reported on Monday, paving the way for Donald Tusk ...
Poland's voters delivered a clear verdict. After eight years of rule by a right-wing government, they have had enough. While the conservative ruling Law and Justice party won more votes than any ...
The ONR considers itself an ideological descendant of the 1930s-era National Radical Camp, an ultranationalist, patriotic, and antisemitic political movement which existed in the pre-World War II Second Polish Republic, [6] an illegal Polish anti-communist, [7] and nationalist political party formed on 14 April 1934 mostly by the youth radicals ...