Voters and Polls Diverge on Ruling Coalition’s Election Strategy

A recent CBOS survey and a separate reader poll reveal conflicting views on whether the current ruling coalition should contest the 2027 parliamentary elections on a single joint ticket.

Reader sentiment leans against a joint coalition ticket

In a recent reader survey, 67.48 percent of respondents—totaling 1,386 people—opposed the idea of the ruling parties (Koalicja Obywatelska, Polska 2050, Polskie Stronnictwo Ludowe, and Nowa Lewica) running together in 2027. Only 29.60 percent supported a joint list, while 60 people remained undecided.

CBOS data highlights widespread voter indifference

Official CBOS research on the coalition’s electoral strategy shows that indifference is the most common stance, with 36 percent of respondents saying they do not care how the parties run. Among those with a clear preference, 30 percent favored separate lists, while only 15 percent supported a unified coalition ticket.

Latest poll updates on party support

A late May Pollster Institute survey for Super Express indicates that if elections were held now, Koalicja Obywatelska would lead with 32.98 percent, followed by Prawo i Sprawiedliwość at 26.6 percent. Konfederacja secured 13.29 percent, with smaller parties like Razem, PSL, and Polska 2050 polling below the five percent threshold.

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