Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
October 26, 2015
Things are changing all over.
Poland’s eurosceptic Law and Justice party (PiS) will have to wait for the final vote tallies before deciding whether to seek a formal political partner after crushing the incumbent pro-EU government in elections on Sunday.
Exit polls covering 90 percent of polling stations showed three smaller parties, including the leftwing alliance that grew out of the pre-1989 Communist Party, teetering on the edge of the threshold for entering parliament.
That might make for some political horsetrading over the next few weeks but will not weaken the decisive swing towards Law and Justice’s brand of social conservatism mixed with left-leaning economics. Official results are due on Tuesday.
The victory for Jaroslaw Kaczynski’s group returns it to power for the first time in eight years and is the biggest in terms of seats by a single party in free elections since Poland shed communism in 1989.
The party immediately signaled plans to reap new revenues from next year with a tax on bank assets, and there were also signs that it was confident of enough informal support in parliament from other parties to plan changes to Poland’s constitution.
“Many party leaders have talked of wanting deeper change in Poland so, if we want to deliver that, changes to the constitution are vital,” the party’s spokesman on economic affairs, Zbigniew Kuzmiuk, told Polish public radio.
Shares in some of Poland’s biggest banks fell sharply on Monday but the zloty was only marginally lower, reflecting the assumption of many investors over the past month that a PiS victory was likely.
Even though Poland obviously has issues with Russia, this almost necessarily means the Poles are going to shift toward that pole.
The Guardian is pissed – because the patriarchy and whatnot, or whatever.
The Guardian is also pissed about all this racism (which comes from fear of being raped and murdered).
What we are seeing is that social factors are overpowering economic factors in the EU. Ultimately, these Eastern countries are going to end up getting over their decades-old daddy issues with Russia, and lining up on the right side of things.
It’s inevitable.