“There is no right”. This is how Donald Tusk answered Andrzej Duda

Tusk during the conference before the meeting of the government said that “a lot of understandable emotions raise doubts about the irregularities in the election.” – We are dealing with the voices of citizens who demand the state of the state in this matter on a daily basis. I think I will say it on behalf of the entire Polish government: Nobody, regardless of which office he exercises – even if it is the highest office in the state – there is no right to underestimate one wasted voice – he said.
He emphasized that the government's task “is to give citizens the conviction that the state would not disregard a single vote.”
– I did not notice that any of the leaders of our coalition would try to raise anxiety or undermine the result of the election. We try to rationally and calmly follow the constitution and the electoral code and ordinary human decency – he emphasized.
– Nobody has the right – I say this moved by the words of President Duda – to underestimate the problem and say that these are some insignificant things, there are 5,000 there. votes, maybe 1,000 or maybe 20,000 It is not our intention and we are not called to this as a government to decide whether to give opinions on whether the election was held correctly or not. This is not our task. As you know, executive power should not deal with counting votes and recognizing whether the elections are important or not – said the prime minister.
And he added: – I can't imagine anyone who, in addition, depends on the voters – whether it is the president, prime minister, marshal, minister – he said dismissively and contemptuous that here “post -communists want to overturn the election. These words were very inappropriate and simply stupid,” said Tusk.