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Farmers from the Baltic to the Tatras

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Farmers from the Baltic to the Tatras
Polish: Rolnicy od Bałtyku do Tatr
AbbreviationRBT[1]
ChairmanHenryk Połcik[1]
Vice-ChairmenAndrzej Bęben[1]
Mariusz Woźniak[1]
SecretaryJerzy Strząska[1]
TreasurerPaweł Stąporek[2]
FounderAndrzej Bęben[2]
Founded18 April 2024[3]
Registered24 April 2024[3]
HeadquartersŁukawka 28, 27-532 Wojciechowice[2]
IdeologyPeasant movement[4]
Colours  Green[1]
SloganDecalogue the guide of the farmers
(Polish: Dekalog drogowskazem rolników)
[1]
Sejm
0 / 460
Senate
0 / 100
European Parliament
0 / 51
Regional assemblies
0 / 552
City presidents
0 / 107
Powiat Councils
0 / 6,170
Gmina Councils
0 / 39,416
Website
www.rolnicy-rbt.pl

The Farmers from the Baltic to the Tatras (Polish: Rolnicy od Bałtyku do Tatr, RBT) is a Polish electoral committee registered for the 2024 European Parliament election in Poland. It was founded on 18 April 2024 and was then registered on 24 April. Before being registered, it was called to correct irregularities that the National Electoral Commission found during the registration of the committee.[5] Its founders are farmers from a small village of Wojciechowice in Opatów County, in Eastern Poland.[6] It was considered one of the agrarian electoral committees founded by farmers in wake of the 2024 Polish farmers' protests, which sparked Polish farmers' protests against the policies of the European Union.[4] The demands of the protesting farmers include abolishing or reforming the European Green Deal, along with preventing the entrance of Ukrainian grain and sugar into Polish markets.[7]

In its program, the electoral committee puts heavy emphasis on the development of hydroelectricity in Poland, believing that if developed, it could cover most of the Polish electricity demand. It also proposes reforms that would make the European Union more supportive of agriculture and farmers. It postulates the implementation of waterway projects in Poland that would then be integrated into larger European waterway systems.[8] The proposals of the Farmers from the Baltic to the Tatras also include training for African farmers and an internship program that would enable them to undergo training on European farms, along with modernization of Polish healthcare system that would improve healthcare access in the Polish countryside.[1] The committee believes that the post-1989 capitalist reforms in Poland failed the Polish countryside, resulting in rural poverty and lack of healthcare.[9]

Background

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Since February 2024, Polish farmers have been organizing nationwide protests, with general demands being to abolish or reform the European Union regulations introduced by the European Green Deal, along with the implementiation of protectionist measures that would cease the import of Ukrainian grain and sugar into Polish markets.[7] Protesting farmers argue that the prices of the agricultural products have become so low that farming is no longer a sustainable profession in Poland.[10] Research from March 2024 found hat only 30% of Polish farmers earned a monthly income above the minimum wage. The poverty amongst Polish farmers has been steadily growing ever since the late 2000s, which was escalated by the 2011 law that force the purchase of leased land and indebtness of many farmers.[11]

The situation in the Polish countryside was furned worsened and declined rapidly in 2018, as the 2018 drought affected more than 2.2 million hectares and caused losses of around 900 million PLN to Polish farms. Crop failure combined with the African swine fever virus render farming completely unprofitable in Poland, causing radical and anti-government sentiment in the countryside. In wake of this, many radical agrarian parties emerged in Poland, such as AGROunia and the Peasants' Party.[12] These parties were inspired by the 1990s far-left Samoobrona movement, a radical rural trade union and a party that became known for its radical tactics, such as clashes with the police.[13] Its willigness to assault police officers and debt collectors became an important factor in the radicalization of the Polish countryside.[14]

History

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The Farmers from the Baltic to the Tatras was founded on 18 April 2024 in a small village of Wojciechowice located in Eastern Poland.[3] As of 2024, the village was home to around 300 people. The village was place of the 2024 Polish farmers' protests, and additionally there was a political protest in Wojciechowice in April 2024, as the mayor of the village was re-elected by a single vote in the 2024 Polish local elections. Because the margin of mayor's victory was one vote, the result of the election is to be decided by the court.[15]

On 22 April 2024, the National Electoral Commission found irregularities in the registration process of the Farmers from the Baltic to the Tatras, and requested a correction.[5] The electoral committee was formally registered for the election two days later, on 24 April 2024.[3] The electoral representative of the committee is Andrzej Bęben, while the treasurer is Paweł Stąporek.[2] The leader of the party is Henryk Połcik, with the elecotoral representative of the RBT, Andrzej Bęben, being one of the vice-chairmen.[1]

The Farmers from the Baltic to the Tatras was considered to be a part of the larger electoral action by Polish farmers sparked by the ongoing 2024 Polish farmers' protests, where Polish farmers protest against the policies of the European Union as well as the sharp decline of grain prices in Poland attributted to the presence of Ukrainian grain in Polish markets. However, the electoral committee of the Farmers from the Baltic to the Tatras was considered unlikely to gain any seats to the European Parliament, given the 5% electoral threshold as well as presence of numerous other agrarian electoral committees in the Polish election.[4]

In May 2024, the formation argued that the electoral law for the European Parliament elections in Poland is unfair and bureucratized, as electoral committees are "discriminated against in political life" in contrast to well-established, nationwide political parties. Non-partisan electoral committees are required to collect 1,000 signatures in order to be registered; moreover, candidates list for each constitutency requires signatures of at least 10,000 voters permanently residing in the constitutency. Political parties, however, have no such requirements. According to the Farmers from the Baltic to the Tatras, this makes it "practically impossible to submit lists".[16]

On 25 May, the electoral committee announced that it was unable to submit candidate lists to any of the constitutencies because the signature requirements made it run out of time. The party wrote a letter requesting the President of Poland Andrzej Duda to allocate more time to the committees that are required to collect signatures, as it constitutes an additional electoral activity that the Election Code requires without providing time necessary to do so.[17] On 1 June 2024, the Farmers from the Baltic to the Tatras officially submitted an application in the Office of the President to postpone the European Parliament elections in Poland in order to accommodate this additional electoral activity. The committee argued that this constitutes a form of inequality, as party committees do not have this requirement and thus have more time for electoral activities.[18]

Ultimately, the application was ignored and the election took place on 9 June 2024 as planned. On 19 June, the committee submitted a motion to invalidate European Parliament elections to the Supreme Court of Poland, arguing that the electoral calendar makes it practically impossible for voters' electoral committees to participate in the election by requiring them to carry out an additional task in form of collecting signatures without providing time necessary to do so. The committee argued that this essentially restricts electoral participation to well-established political parties only.[19] Public Polish Press Agency reported that the motion of the Farmers from the Baltic to the Tatras was received by the Supreme Court, along with 8 other such motions that likewise called for the election to be invalidated on similar grounds.[20]

Program

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The electoral program of the Farmers from the Baltic to the Tatras mainly postulates a greater role of rivers in the economies of European Union states, a training program for African farmers, as well as reforms to the agricultural law of the European Union. The electoral committee promotes hydroelectricity and argues that electricity generates from the hydroelectric power plants in the river basins of Vistula and Oder can cover a significant proportion of the Poland's electricity needs.[8] The slogan of the electoral committee is Decalogue the guide of the farmers (Polish: Dekalog drogowskazem rolników).[1]

It proposes the implementation of the Baltic Sea-Black Sea waterway project Vistula-San-Dniester-Prut-Danube plan drafted by Polish professor Maksymilian Matakiewicz in 1927, which would be integrated into the waterway system of the European Union.[8] The RBT believes that Vistula "may in the near future become a blessing for our people who have been oppressed for so long". The electoral committee makes references to the Polish interwar philosopher Roman Ingarden, claiming to be following his ideal of cherishing and developing the Polish special relationships with its rivers and sea access.[1]

The Farmers from the Baltic to the Tatras also proposes a training program for the farmers of Africa, which would be based on a similar training project for the farmers of Africa, Asia and Latin America organised by the United Nations during the Cold War. The training is to be organized by Poland and other states of the European Union and include training advisors to assist the farmers; the final stage of the training program would include granting the trainees several-month internships in Polish farms. The trained African farmers would then become "ambassadors for Polish agricultural products".[1]

The committee also puts a heavy emphasis on development of healthcare and the improvement of healthcare access in Polish countryside. The Farmers from the Baltic to the Tatras proposes online and home-based rehabilitation programs, especially in places where clinics are not available. It also envisions the creation of "medical kiosks" in Polish villages, which would have appropriate diagnostic equipment to enable direct consultation with doctors via video conferencing.[1] The leader of the committee, Henry Połcik, is heavy critical of the consequences of the post-1989 transformation of Poland into a capitalist free-market state, noting the widespread rural poverty and lack of appropriate healthcare in rural areas.[9]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Połcik, Henryk (2024). "Rolnicy od Bałtyku do Tatr" (in Polish).
  2. ^ a b c d "KOMITET WYBORCZY WYBORCÓW ROLNICY OD BAŁTYKU DO TATR w wyborach do Parlamentu Europejskiego w 2024 r." wybory.gov.pl (in Polish). 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d "UCHWAŁA NR 241/2024 PAŃSTWOWEJ KOMISJI WYBORCZEJ z dnia 24 kwietnia 2024 r." (PDF). wybory.gov.pl (in Polish). 24 April 2024.
  4. ^ a b c "Polska straci wpływ na politykę rolną w Unii Europejskiej?". polskarola.pl (in Polish). 2 May 2024.
  5. ^ a b Żak, Karol (22 April 2024). "PKW zarejestrowała 35 komitetów wyborczych w wyborach do Parlamentu Europejskiego". rfm24.pl (in Polish).
  6. ^ "Andrzej Bęben, Łukawka, powiat opatowski". echodnia.eu (in Polish). 2024.
  7. ^ a b Skowron, Ada (21 February 2024). "Manifestacje, blokady i żądania. O co chodzi w proteście rolników?". polskieradio24.pl (in Polish).
  8. ^ a b c Połcik, Hernyk (25 April 2024). "Rolnicy od Bałtyku do Tatr". salon24.pl (in Polish).
  9. ^ a b Połcik, Henryk (26 November 2023). "Transformacja ustrojowa na wsi". salon24.pl (in Polish).
  10. ^ "Ceny zbóż sprzed dziesięciu lat i ziarno z Ukrainy. Rolnicy protestują w Łodzi". cenyrolnicze.pl (in Polish). 12 April 2024.
  11. ^ Budzisz, Marek (20 March 2024). "Marek Budzisz: Protesty rolników będą wracać nieustannie, jeśli nie zmienimy całej polityki rolnej". rp.pl (in Polish).
  12. ^ "Powstaje Partia Chłopska". gpcodziennie.pl (in Polish). 7 August 2018. Retrieved 29 August 2023.
  13. ^ Ekiert, Grzegorz; Kubik, Jan (June 1998). "Collective Protest in Post-Communist Poland, 1989–1993". Communist and Post-Communist Studies. 31 (2). University of California Press: 91–117. doi:10.1016/S0967-067X(98)00002-6. JSTOR 48609349.
  14. ^ Pleines, Heiko (2006). "Participation of civil society in new modes of governance: the case of the new EU member states. Part 3: Involvement at the EU level" (PDF). Arbeitspapiere und Materialien. 76. Bremen: Forschungsstelle Osteuropa an der Universität Bremen: 89–91. ISSN 1616-7384.
  15. ^ Czajkowska, Teresa (11 April 2024). "Głos różnicy przyczyną protestu wyborczego w gminie Wojciechowice". cozadzien.pl (in Polish).
  16. ^ Połcik, Henryk (12 May 2024). "Czy wybory do Parlamentu Europejskiego są zgodne z konstytucją ?". salon24.pl (in Polish).
  17. ^ Połcik, Henryk (25 May 2024). "Czy Prezydencki kalendarz wyborczy dyskryminuje komitety wyborcze wyborców?". salon24.pl (in Polish).
  18. ^ Połcik, Henryk (1 June 2024). "Wniosek o przesunięcie wyborów do Parlamentu Europejskiego u Prezydenta A. Dudy". salon24.pl (in Polish).
  19. ^ Połcik, Henryk (19 June 2024). "Wnioski o unieważnienie wyborów do Parlamentu Europejskiego w Sądzie Najwyższym". salon24.pl (in Polish).
  20. ^ Jabłoński, Marcin (19 June 2024). "KWW "Rolnicy od Bałtyku do Tatr" złożył protest wyborczy do Sądu Najwyższego". agropolska.pl (in Polish).