‘We have a chance to change Poland’: how young voters shaped the election result

Turnout in this election was 74.3%, a record that exceeded even the turnout of 1989, a vote that triggered the collapse of the Soviet-backed communist system. Key to that was the mobilisation of youth

The last time anyone other than the Law and Justice party (PiS) ruled Poland, Aleksandra, a sociology student in Warsaw, was 10. Throughout her adolescence, the rightwing populism of Jarosław Kaczyński’s party was the defining force, a series of governments rolling back abortion rights, eroding the rule of law and politicising the state apparatus.

Now, however, Aleksandra’s generation appears to have fought back, turning out in huge numbers to help oust PiS and its septuagenarian leader from power. “I voted for the first time and I don’t really remember a Poland ruled by the opposition,” said the now 18-year-old student, who preferred not to give her surname.

Aleksandra voted in Sunday’s election for the leftwing party Lewica, which garnered 8.6% of the overall vote and is likely to enter some form of coalition with Donald Tusk, the opposition leader and former prime minister. She said she hopes any new government will “depoliticise public television” and address women’s and LGBTQ+ rights….

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/oct/21/young-voters-who-shaped-poland-election-result