A recent survey found 47.7 % of respondents approved Confederal’s suggestion that PiS must drop its leaders to cooperate, while 19.7 % disagreed and 32.6 % were undecided; the poll was conducted Oct. 21‑22, 2025.
Survey Results on Proposed Coalition
The SW Research Agency conducted, on behalf of Onet, a poll asking participants how they judged the Confederal proposal that PiS would cooperate only if Jarosław Kaczyński and Mateusz Morawiecki left active politics. Three‑quarters of respondents gave a neutral “I don’t know” answer, leaving 47.7 % in favor, 19.7 % against, and 32.6 % undecided.
The survey included 825 respondents and was carried out online (CAWI) on October 21‑22, 2025.
Demographic Breakdown
Women and men largely rated the proposal positively—44.2 % of women and 51.6 % of men. Negative ratings were equal at 19.8 % of women and 19.7 % of men.
Support was slightly higher among rural residents (48 %) than among city dwellers, where 17.5 % were opposed and 24.6 % were undecided.
Mentzen Questions Feasibility
Confederal leader Sławomir Mentzen said in a Radio ZET interview that a PiS‑Confederal coalition is impossible “as long as Jarosław Kaczyński is the head of PiS and Mateusz Morawiecki is its right hand.” He added that the withdrawal of the two politicians would make a pact possible.
Kaczyński Dismisses Collaboration
Jarosław Kaczyński echoed the position at a PiS press conference, stating that cooperation is impossible “unless a miracle of complete change of views occurs.” He said “binding us with them is a complete misunderstanding” and warned that a rival program would “carry Poland and Polish society into the air.”








