Feb 14 • 21:04 UTC 🇵🇱 Poland Rzeczpospolita

Paulina Hennig-Kloska: The new chairperson of Poland 2050 wants to stir things up

Paulina Hennig-Kloska discusses the internal crisis within the Poland 2050 party, highlighting authoritarian management and the likelihood of a split within the party.

In a revealing interview, Paulina Hennig-Kloska, a prominent member of the Poland 2050 political party, outlines the internal crisis that has been worsening over the past few weeks. She emphasizes the lack of dialogue within the party and the dominance of authoritarian management styles that threaten to deepen divisions within the parliamentary club and endanger the entire ruling coalition. Hennig-Kloska's assessment of the situation raises concerns about the party’s direction, suggesting that it is drifting towards destructive splits.

She also touches on the implications of the latest election for the party chairperson, which was held on January 31 after a prior vote was annulled on January 12, supposedly due to technical issues. The newly elected chairperson, Katarzyna Pełczyńska-Nałęcz, is seen as engaging in escalating actions that might lead to further discord within the ranks of Poland 2050. Hennig-Kloska mentions her discomfort with the so-called 'kaganiec resolution', reflecting a broader anxiety about the party's governance and the comparison to the political maneuvers of other party leaders like Zbigniew Ziobro.

As tensions rise, Hennig-Kloska argues that the moral dimension of the conflict should not be overlooked, claiming that the party must navigate its ideological battles while grappling with internal dissent. The ongoing crisis has made a split within the party increasingly plausible, representing a significant challenge not only for Poland 2050 but for the stability of the current government coalition in Poland.

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