KO is steadily ahead of PiS, and both Confederations are weakening

2026-04-28 07:30
publication
2026-04-28 07:30
KO can currently count on 33 percent. votes of support, PiS 28% and Confederation 12%. – according to a survey by Social Changes for Interia. According to the survey, the Confederation of the Crown of Poland would also enter the Sejm with a result of 9 percent, and the New Left – 7 percent. and Razem Party – 5 percent.

Only five parties in the Sejm?
The results of the Social Changes survey were published on Monday on the Interia website.
The study shows that KO would win 33%. votes, PiS – 28 percent, Confederation – 12 percent, Confederation of the Crown of Poland – 9 percent, New Left – 7 percent, and Razem Party – 5 percent.
According to the survey, the following entities would be below the electoral threshold: Poland 2050 and PSL; 2% indicated each of these groups. subjects. The “other” option was chosen by 2 percent. respondents.
As indicated, the authors of the study omitted people who answered “it's hard to say” when compiling the results.
The respondents were also asked whether they would take part in the parliamentary elections. 72 percent respondents answered affirmatively, of which 54 percent were “decided”, and 18 percent – “would rather vote. 19% of respondents would not vote, of which every tenth would 'rather' not take part in them; 9 percent she definitely wouldn't vote in the election. The answer “difficult to say” was chosen by 9%. subjects. As we read, “in practice, voter turnout could be approximately 67-70 percent.”
What bothers Poles the most? Electricity and gas outclass fuels
In the survey, respondents were also asked in a form allowing multiple selection of different options: “what is a problem for you personally in Poland right now?” The most, 57 percent. respondents chose high energy prices – electricity and gas. In second place were access to health care, queues to doctors (56%), and then expensive fuel (45%).
Next came: expensive food (43%), the threat of war (43%), prices of medicines and medical care (41%), high prices of new apartments and low wages (38% each) and low pensions (37%).
The survey by Social Changes was conducted on April 17-20, 2026, using the CAWI method, on a representative group of 1,090 adult Poles. (PAP)
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