In September, CBOS surveyed public confidence in politicians; 58% trust Karol Nawrocki, up six points, while 25% distrust him, down six points.
Who Poles Trust the Most?
In September, CBOS surveyed public confidence in politicians. President Karol Nawrocki earned 58% trust—up six points from August—while 25% distrusted him, a decline of six points, and 12% remained indifferent.
Second place went to Defence Minister Władysław Kosiniak‑Kamysz, who had 45% trust, a five‑point increase; 27% distrusted him, down two points, and 16% were indifferent.
Foreign Minister Radosław Sikorski also logged 45% trust, up two points, but 32% distrusted him—down three points—and 13% were indifferent.
Who Poles Trust the Least?
The Confederation’s leader, Krzysztof Bosak, received 40% trust—a one‑point rise—while 30% distrusted him and 15% were indifferent. His peer, Sławomir Mentzen, had identical trust levels but a higher 36% distrust and 15% indifference.
Other figures with low trust scores included Warsaw mayor Rafał Trzaskowski (40% trust, 43% distrust, 13% indifferent), Sejm Marshal Szymon Hołownia (38/38 percent), Adrian Zandberg (36/23 percent), former Prime Minister Donald Tusk (36/51 percent), ex‑PM Mateusz Morawiecki (35/48 percent), former Defence Minister Mariusz Błaszczak (32/39 percent), and PiS leader Jarosław Kaczyński (31/52 percent).
In the distrust ranking, Grzegorz Braun led with 53%, followed by Kaczyński and Tusk.
Party Support Levels
In a July survey conducted by IBRiS for “Rzeczpospolita,” 1,067 respondents indicated their preferred parties if elections were held on the first Sunday in August.
The Civic Coalition would receive 30.1% support, Law and Justice 28.7%, Confederation 14.6%, and the Left 7.1%. Parties below the electoral threshold were: Confederation of the Polish Crown 4.6%, Polish People’s Party 3.6%, and Together Party 3.1%. Poland 2050 attracted 2.8%, other groups 1.1%, and non‑voters 4.3% of respondents.
Regarding voter turnout, 71.7% said they would definitely vote; 17.8% said “probably”; 5.5% said “certainly not”; 3% said “probably not”; and 2% had no response.



