In a November OGB poll, 34.2% of Poles view the current government positively—up sharply from 24.5% in October.
Strong rise in positive ratings
According to the November OGB survey, 34.2% of respondents rate the current government positively, a significant jump from 24.5% in October. The authors note it is one of the most dynamic upward shifts in Tusk’s cabinet ratings in recent months. Such a high score had not been recorded since April 2024, according to OGB.
Less criticism
The percentage of negative assessments also fell, with 49% criticizing the government—a two‑percentage‑point drop from the previous month. Nevertheless, they remain the largest group. An even larger change concerns the undecided: 23.8% were neither good nor bad in October, falling to 16.8% in November, suggesting more Poles are forming opinions on the cabinet’s actions.
Growth mainly among coalition voters
OGB president Łukasz Pawłowski said the improvement does not stem from shifts among opposition voters. “Opposition party voters (PiS, Confederation, KKP) do not like this government as much as in previous months,” he said. He added that support growth appears mainly among voters of parties in the governing coalition, especially the New Left, whose supporters now more often choose “rather good” instead of “neither good nor bad.” The OGB survey was conducted via CATI (computer‑assisted telephone interviews) with 1,000 respondents from 25‑28 November 2025.



