Although only in the European Union for five weeks, Polish voters appear ready to elect an EU reformist this week
Published:
8 June 2004 y., Tuesday
Although only in the European Union for five weeks, Polish voters appear ready to elect an EU reformist this week, The Times of London said Monday.
The leader of the party called Self Defense is 64-year-old farmer Andrzej Lepper, who says if he wins in Sunday's election, he will "press for a thorough renegotiation of EU entry terms so that we can use our potential properly in farming and in industry."
In national politics his party is the second-strongest force, with 29 percent backing.
The 64-year-old candidate is ahead according to opinion polls, and his party should win the largest number of seats allocated to Poland in the European Parliament.
Analysts believe Lepper's popularity is rooted in the impoverished rural areas, whereas it was the majority of city-dwellers who voted for entry into the EU.
Šaltinis:
washtimes.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Picket against human rights violations in Belarus held in Poland
more »
Boat people arriving in Cape Otranto on the eastern coast of Italy
more »
Moldova: Protesters Call For Resignation Of Government
more »
The crowd in a spacious square in Minsk on a crisp autumn day recently was subdued but hardly fearful
more »
Serbians failed for the third time in a year yesterday to elect a president because of low voter turnout, triggering a political crisis in the Balkan republic
more »
Members of the Krakow Jewish community and U.S. college students unveiled a plaque Monday honoring German industrialist Oscar Schindler
more »
The meeting of the leaders of the Baltic youth organizations of the right wing took place on November 1-2 in Piarnu, Estonia
more »
Human trafficking finds new ways
more »
ESTONIANS WANT DIRECT ELECTION OF MORE POWERFUL PRESIDENT
more »
Unemployment in Eastern European nations that will join the European Union in May, including Poland, Slovakia and the Czech Republic, may rise from their current near-record levels
more »