Donald Tusk to resign? There's a new poll. Poles are so divided

In the latest United Surveys poll, conducted for Wirtualna Polska, respondents were asked whether Donald Tusk should remain as head of the Polish government or leave. 41.5% of respondents believe that the prime minister should resign, while 41.2% believe that he should continue working. 17.3% are unable to answer this question unequivocally.
This is how Poles evaluate Donald Tusk. The latest pollThe survey also examined how respondents’ political views translate into their answers on Donald Tusk’s future. In the case of voters of the ruling coalition, as many as 75% of respondents want the politician to continue his mission as prime minister, while 14% have the opposite opinion.
In turn, in the case of people who declare themselves as voters of Law and Justice and Confederation, the proportion is reversed. 75% believe that Donald Tusk should resign, while 21% believe that he should remain in office. As for the remaining voters, 35% support Tusk's continuation as prime minister, while 28% oppose it.
The United Surveys survey was conducted for Wirtualna Polska on June 27-29, 2025. The survey was conducted using the CATI (telephone interviews) and CAWI (online interviews) methods on a representative sample of 1,000 people. Who's for Tusk? Sikorski in the lead, Trzaskowski secondAt the end of June, SW Research, commissioned by "Wprost", conducted a survey in which we asked the following question: "If Donald Tusk were to resign as prime minister, who should replace him and head the government?" 20.4% of respondents indicated the current Minister of Foreign Affairs Radosław Sikorski as Donald Tusk's successor, and 16.6% believed that the mayor of Warsaw, Rafał Trzaskowski, would be a good choice in this role.
In turn, 8.8 percent see the leader of the Polish People's Party, deputy prime minister and head of the Ministry of National Defense Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz in this position, and 7.3 percent would bet on the speaker of the Sejm and leader of Poland 2050 Szymon Hołownia. The fewest votes (3 percent) were obtained by Włodzimierz Czarzasty, co-chairman of the New Left, deputy speaker of the Sejm.
As many as 25.3% of respondents believe that someone else should lead the government. 18.8% of respondents have no opinion on the matter.
Read also: Bad news for Hołownia. Poll for "Wprost": Poles want a change in the position of the Sejm Speaker Read also: Tusk's government in the corner, is Hołownia preparing a U-turn? "This could be a trial balloon"
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