POLITICO 28 [Class of 2017]

Page 38

4 POLAND

Jarosław Kaczyński T H E B ACKB E N C H D R I V E R

Formally, Jarosław Kaczyński is just one of 460 members of the Polish parliament. In reality, the former prime minister and current chairman of the ruling Law and Justice party is the most powerful man in the country. Whatever the decision — who will run Poland’s state television? Should Donald Tusk be backed for a second term as European Council president? Does Prime Minister Beata Szydło get to keep her job? — it is Kaczyński who makes the final call. In Poland, that has meant a sharp change in direction as Kaczyński has pushed back against what he sees as a quarter century of corruption, runaway liberalism, and dissipating national identity and control. Along with his ally in Budapest, Viktor Orbán, the 67-year-old leads the eastern flank of the anti-establishment brigades that have scored significant victories in the West, from Brexit to Donald Trump, and is setting its sights on critical elections in France, Germany and the Netherlands next year. A lifelong bachelor, Kaczyński needles Brussels and cosmopolitan pieties with brio and pushes Catholic family values, all the while seizing — and to his vocal critics, emasculating — Poland’s relatively young democratic institutions that were

38 POLITICO 28

KACZYŃSKI THE MAN

Kaczyński arrives at work at about 10 in the morning, driven by his security detail (he has no driver’s license). He doesn’t go out for lunch. He prefers traditional Polish food bought from a nearby canteen by his secretary. He almost always eats alone. He is a 67-year-old life-long bachelor. He speaks no foreign language, owns no computer, and only opened his first bank account in 2009.

a model of a successful transition away from authoritarianism. In his tangles with Brussels so far, score it for Kaczyński. The Commission criticized his party’s moves to overhaul Poland’s constitutional court and media sector. It was ignored, and its attacks handed the wily Pole a propaganda gift at home. The nation state “is the only institution able to guarantee democracy and freedom,” Kaczyński told a group of leading European newspapers. “Who attacks us will not win. Poland will remain Poland.” His hostility to the EU comes unadulterated. “The question is, if the Union in its current shape, with its horrible bureaucracy and institutionalized undermining of the nation state, is able to survive,” he told a Polish interviewer. “According to me, no.” In the months ahead, Kaczyński will play a role in the EU’s negotiations with

PHOTOGRAPH BY WOJCIECH GRZEDZINSKI/LAIF


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