Poland has voted with knife-danare with the role of European Union at stake

The pole is prescribed on Sunday to vote for the role of the country in Europe in the knife-day presidential election and to vote with the major implications for abortion and LGBTQ rights.Warsaw’s European Union Mayor Rafal Trzscowski, 53, a colleague of the Centrist Government, Nationalist historian Karol Navki, faces 42.The referendum surveys at 50.1 percent predict a very close race with the boat and Tzscowski at 49.9 percent, a small difference within the margin of error.The European Union and NATO have open poles between 0500 GMT and 1900 GMT, which is the border of Ukraine and has been a major supporters of their neighbor against Russia.A exit voting is expected as soon as the ballots are closed and the election officials estimate that the final result will be known on Monday.A win will be a major boost for the government’s progressive agenda led by Prime Minister Donald Task, President of the former European Council.This can mean significant social changes such as the introduction of civil participation for similar-sex couples and reducing the near-clin on abortion.The fast growing economy of 38 million people has the power of the President, Vito law in Poland and also the commander-in-chief of the armed forces.The victory for Nawrocki will embrace the Jeet Laws and Justice (PIS) party, which ruled Poland between 2015 and 2023, and can hold fresh parliamentary elections.Many Nawrocki pro -immigration want strict karb and advocate for conservative values and advocate more sovereignty for the country within the European Union.“We should not be given under European pressure,” 40 -year -old Agnizka Prokopyuk, a housewife, said in front of the vote.“We need to make our way … and do not bend to the trends from the West,” he told AFP in the city of Biala Podlaska in East Poland near Belarus border.The 48 -year -old mechanic, Tomas Kozubun said: “The European Union is important but the sovereignty of our country is very important.”
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Political expert, Anna Matarska-Sasnovska, called the election “a real struggle of civilizations” due to extensive policy differences between candidates.Many trzaskowski voters support more integration and acceleration of social reforms within the European Union.Malgorzetta Wojcichowska, a tour guide and teacher in his half -century, said that polish women unfortunately “do not have equal rights to our European friends”.“I hope Rafale Tzscowski will resume the debate on abortion so that we can eventually live in an independent country where we could have our own opinion,” he told AFP.The election is also closely viewed in Ukraine, which is trying to increase international diplomatic support in its conversation with Russia as it has resistance to Moscow invasion.Navki, a fan of US President Donald Trump, opposed NATO’s membership for Kiev and called on the benefits for a million Ukrainian refugees estimated in Poland.He used his final campaign hours on Friday to release flowers at a memorial for the poles killed by Ukrainian nationalists during World War II.“It was a massacre against the Polish people,” he said.The final result of the election is expected to be hoped on whether the transskuski can gather enough supporters and whether the distant voters will cast their ballots for the boat.In the first round of the election, far-flung candidates got more than 21 percent of the votes, which Tzscowski won by a 31 percent razor-thunder margin against the 30 percent for the boat.