The Left (Poland)

The Left
Lewica
Leaders
Parliamentary leaderAnna Maria Żukowska
Founded19 July 2019
Preceded byUnited Left
Ideology
Political positionCentre-left to left-wing
National affiliationSenate Pact 2023 (for 2023 Senate election)
MembersNew Left
Left Together
Polish Socialist Party
Labour Union
Social Democracy of Poland
Freedom and Equality
Sejm
26 / 460
Senate
9 / 100
European Parliament
7 / 52
Regional assemblies
11 / 552
City Presidents
11 / 107
Website
klub-lewica.org.pl
Members of The Left - from left: Włodzimierz Czarzasty, Dorota Olko, Agata Diduszko-Zyglewska, Anna Maria Żukowska, Agnieszka Dziemianowicz-Bąk, Joanna Scheuring-Wielgus, Magdalena Biejat, Daria Gosek-Popiołek, Robert Biedroń.

The Left (Polish: Lewica) is a political alliance in Poland. Initially founded to contest the 2019 parliamentary election, the alliance now consists of the New Left and Left Together.

It also originally consisted of Democratic Left Alliance and Spring until its merging to create the New Left, including the Polish Socialist Party that left the coalition in 2021. It is also supported by several minor left-wing parties, including Your Movement, Yes for Łódź, Urban Movement, and the Polish Communist Party.

The Left is a catch-all coalition of the Polish left, and it is positioned on the centre-left and left-wing. It is mainly orientated towards the principles of social democracy, and democratic socialism. It also advocates progressive, social-liberal and secular policies, including LGBT rights. It is supportive of Poland's membership in the European Union.

In the 2023 Polish parliamentary election, The Left coalition is technically participating as the New Left party, whose list includes representatives of Left Together, Labour Union, Polish Socialist Party, Freedom and Equality and Social Democracy of Poland.

Voter base

As Lewica is formed as a unification of the Polish left, it has attempted to diversify its platform and appeal to a broader range of voters, rather than relying mostly on the votes of former officials and civil servants during the PPR period, which had been and continues to be one of the Democratic Left Alliance's largest voting blocs. This attempt, however, was met with somewhat limited success by the fact that the coalition's pro-LGBT rights platform failed to appeal to working class and economically left-leaning Poles, which tend to favour a more socially conservative policy (especially as both economically interventionist and social conservative positions were already being provided by the right-wing PiS party). At the same time, the more liberally-oriented city-dwelling population, which could favour the party's proposed socially progressive policies, found little appeal in the party's platform of economic interventionism.

Despite this, some sociologists theorized that the unification of the parties could lead to an overall mobilization of leftist voters, which could now feel that their vote for the coalition wouldn't be wasted. This was confirmed to be the case when Lewica succeeded in electing 49 members to the Sejm and 2 members to the Senate of Poland in the 2019 Polish parliamentary election, thus making the coalition Poland's third largest political force and overturning a four-year absence of left-wing representatives in Poland's parliament.

In addition, the party's platform, which differs greatly from the platforms of the other major Polish political parties, has managed to find some support among disillusioned younger and secular voters, which don't identify with any political force or even with the left, but instead desire "something new".

At the same time, the party also received a considerable boost in support among older voters after the ruling PiS party passed a "degradation law", which cut retirement pensions and disability benefits for thousands of former bureaucrats during the PPR period, whose main income was now directly threatened by the new government policy. This led to an expansion and consolidation of the otherwise shrinking of the Democratic Left Alliance's previously described voting bloc.

Ideology

The 2019 electoral program of the Left included:

Composition

Current members

Party Ideology Position Leader MPs Senators MEPs Sejmiks
New Left Social democracy Centre-left Włodzimierz Czarzasty, Robert Biedroń
19 / 460
5 / 100
4 / 51
11 / 552
Left Together Democratic socialism Left-wing Magdalena Biejat, Adrian Zandberg
7 / 460
2 / 100
0 / 51
0 / 552
Polish Socialist Party Democratic socialism Left-wing Wojciech Konieczny
0 / 460
1 / 100
0 / 51
0 / 552
Labour Union Social democracy Centre-left Waldemar Witkowski
0 / 460
1 / 100
0 / 51
0 / 552
Social Democracy of Poland Social democracy Centre-left Wojciech Filemonowicz [pl]
0 / 460
0 / 100
0 / 51
0 / 552
Freedom and Equality Social democracy
Democratic socialism
Left-wing Piotr Musiał [Wikidata]
0 / 460
0 / 100
0 / 51
0 / 552

Election results

Sejm

Year Leader Popular vote % of vote Seats Seat change Government
2019 Włodzimierz Czarzasty 2,319,946 12.56 (#3)
49 / 460
New PiS
2023 1,859,018 8.61 (#4)
26 / 460
Decrease 23 KOPL2050PSLNL

Senate

Year Leader Popular vote % of vote Seats Seat change Majority
2019 Włodzimierz Czarzasty 415,745 2.28 (#4)
2 / 100
n/a KO-PSL-SLD
2023 1,122,512 5.33 (#5)
9 / 100
Increase 7 KO-PSL-PL2050-NL-LR

Presidential

Election year Candidate 1st round 2nd round
# of overall votes % of overall vote # of overall votes % of overall vote
2020 Robert Biedroń 432,129 2.22 (#6) --- ---

This page was last updated at 2023-12-27 13:28 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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