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I'm from Poland - (Polish) Jestem z Polski. <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/83.26.181.173|83.26.181.173]] ([[User talk:83.26.181.173|talk]]) 21:31, 5 February 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
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== Lede has to change ==
'''Previous discussions:'''


It's currently both too long (too many paragraphs) and too poor. This was a good proposition deleted without thorough discussion:
*[[Talk:Poland/Archive_1|Archive 1]]:
*[[Talk:Poland/Archive_2|Archive 2]]:
*[[Talk:Poland/Archive 3|Archive 3]]:
----


'''Poland'''<!-- Do not add English pronunciation per [[Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Lead section]]. --> ({{langx|pl|Polska}} {{IPA|pl|ˈpɔlska||Pl-Polska.ogg}}), officially the '''Republic of Poland''',{{efn|{{langx|pl|[[Rzeczpospolita]] Polska|links=no}} {{IPA|pl|ʐɛt͡ʂpɔsˈpɔlita ˈpɔlska||Pl-Rzeczpospolita Polska.ogg}}}} is a country in [[Central Europe]]. It extends from the [[Baltic Sea]] in the north to the [[Sudetes]] and [[Carpathian Mountains]] in the south, while its longest river is the [[Vistula]]. Poland has a [[Temperate climate|temperate transitional]] climate and is the fifth-most populous [[member state of the European Union]], with its [[Voivodeships of Poland|sixteen voivodeships]] having a total population of over 38 million and covering a combined area of {{convert|312696|km2|abbr=on}}.<ref name="GUS" /><ref name="BBC News 2023" /> It is bordered by [[Lithuania]] and [[Russia]] to the northeast,{{efn|Poland borders the [[Kaliningrad Oblast]], an [[Enclave and exclave|exclave]] of Russia.}} [[Belarus]] and [[Ukraine]] to the east, [[Slovakia]] and the [[Czech Republic]] to the south, and [[Germany]] to the west. The nation's capital and [[List of cities and towns in Poland|largest metropolis]] is [[Warsaw]]. Other major cities include [[Kraków]], [[Wrocław]], [[Łódź]], [[Poznań]], and [[Gdańsk]].
==Homophobia==
What about the rising homophobia in Poland? [[User:Fatlip90|Fatlip90]] 23:38, 26 May 2007 (UTC)


[[Prehistory and protohistory of Poland|Prehistoric human activity on Polish soil]] dates to the [[Lower Paleolithic]], with continuous settlement since the end of the [[Last Glacial Period]]. Culturally diverse throughout [[late antiquity]], in the [[Early Middle Ages|early medieval period]] the region became inhabited by the tribal [[Polans (western)|Polans]], who gave [[Names of Poland|Poland its name]]. The process of establishing proper statehood, which began in 966, coincided with the conversion of a [[Mieszko I|pagan ruler of the Polans]] to Christianity, under the auspices of the [[Catholic Church|Roman Catholic Church]]. The [[Kingdom of Poland]] emerged in 1025, and in 1569 cemented its long-standing [[Polish–Lithuanian union|association with Lithuania]], thus forming the [[Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth]]. At the time, the Commonwealth was one of the [[List of modern great powers|great powers]] of Europe, with a [[Golden Liberty|uniquely liberal]] political system which on 3 May 1791 adopted [[Constitution of 3 May 1791|Europe's first modern constitution]].
::1-Sign your comments.
::2-What gives you the idea that it's rising?
::3-If it is rising, what about it? [[User:JRWalko|JRWalko]] 00:10, 25 May 2007 (UTC)
chez bodes
2. New legislation, likened to the now scrapped [[section 28]] introduced in the UK.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/6596829.stm
http://www.pinknews.co.uk/news/politics/2005-1673.html


With the passing of the prosperous [[Polish Golden Age]], the country was [[Partitions of Poland|partitioned by neighbouring states]] at the end of the 18th century. Poland regained its [[National Independence Day (Poland)|independence]] in 1918 as the [[Second Polish Republic]] and successfully [[Battle of Warsaw (1920)|defended]] it in the [[Polish–Soviet War]] from 1919 to 1921. In September 1939, the [[invasion of Poland]] by [[Nazi Germany|Germany]] [[Soviet invasion of Poland|and the]] [[Soviet Union]] marked the beginning of [[World War II]], which resulted in [[The Holocaust in Poland|the Holocaust]] and millions of [[History of Poland (1939–1945)|Polish casualties]]. As a member of the [[Eastern Bloc]] in the global [[Cold War]], the [[Polish People's Republic]] was a founding signatory of the [[Warsaw Pact]]. Through the emergence and contributions of the [[Solidarity (Polish trade union)|Solidarity movement]], the [[Polish United Workers' Party|communist government]] was [[History of Poland (1945–1989)|dissolved]] and Poland re-established itself as a [[Democracy|democratic state]] in 1989.
3. It's certainly worth mentioning. The government may be treading a grey area when it comes to EU anti-discrimination legislation. See above links. [[User:Fatlip90|Fatlip90]] 23:38, 26 May 2007 (UTC)


Poland is a [[parliamentary republic]], with its [[Bicameralism|bicameral legislature]] comprising the [[Sejm]] and the [[Senate of Poland|Senate]]. It is a [[developed market]] and a [[World Bank high-income economy|high-income economy]]. Considered a [[middle power]], Poland has the [[List of countries by GDP (nominal)|sixth-largest]] economy in the [[European Union]] by [[Gross domestic product|GDP (nominal)]] and the [[List of countries by GDP (PPP)|fifth-largest by GDP (PPP)]]. It provides a [[List of countries by Human Development Index|very high standard of living]], safety, and [[economic freedom]], as well as free [[Education in Poland|university education]] and a [[Health care in Poland|universal health care]] system. The country has 17 [[UNESCO]] [[List of World Heritage Sites in Poland|World Heritage Sites]], 15 of which are cultural. Poland is a founding member state of the United Nations, as well as a member of the [[World Trade Organization]], [[OECD]], [[NATO]], and the [[European Union]] (including the [[Schengen Area]]).
{{reflist-talk}}
*This lede is akin to ledes from other country pages. The current lede is bizarre—both too long and too poor at conveying information. And unlike ledes for other countries (Germany, France etc.)
[[User:FeldmarschallGneisenau|FeldmarschallGneisenau]] ([[User talk:FeldmarschallGneisenau|talk]]) 21:26, 14 February 2024 (UTC)


:Anyone? [[User:FeldmarschallGneisenau|FeldmarschallGneisenau]] ([[User talk:FeldmarschallGneisenau|talk]]) 04:36, 21 April 2024 (UTC)
Nonsense and BS. It's a typical [[Factoid]]. [[User:Barry Kent|Barry Kent]] 10:17, 30 May 2007 (UTC)


:Btw I remembered the MoS recommends 4-paragraph ledes [[User:FeldmarschallGneisenau|FeldmarschallGneisenau]] ([[User talk:FeldmarschallGneisenau|talk]]) 04:40, 21 April 2024 (UTC)
:I agree that the issue of [[LGBT rights in Poland]] should be mentioned in the article. At the moment, this seems to be the single biggest social rights issue for which the country is known in the international media (and in Amnesty International reports), so it should be mentioned on notability grounds. Of course, the issue has to be dealt with objectively. It is obvious that official homophobia in Poland has risen, though less obvious what social attitudes are. I would say that in the past few months the situation may have eased, as can be seen by the successful Warsaw Pride a few days ago. '''[[User:Ronline|Ronline]]''' [[User talk:Ronline|✉]] 11:19, 30 May 2007 (UTC)


::I am not against either, but the 5 paragraph one is more on point with a distinguished separate geo paragraph and MoS is just a guideline. Unfortunately, this is not a GA article. [[User:Merangs|Merangs]] ([[User talk:Merangs|talk]]) 18:50, 22 April 2024 (UTC)
::Given the very concise nature of this article I don't think it belongs here. It should be noted in an article on Poland's politics or demographics but not here where the whole government gets two paragraphs. I am not saying it's not an important issue but keep it in perspective to the fact that Poland is still more tolerant than most of the world's countries where governments deny homosexuals even exist. Besides, what exactly would the statement say? I very much doubt Poland is more homophobic in 2007 than it was in 1987. [[User:JRWalko|JRWalko]] 15:32, 30 May 2007 (UTC)
:::No other country page does a "distinguished geo paragraph" though. The Germany page is Featured, we oughta take an example from it, shouldn't we? [[User:FeldmarschallGneisenau|FeldmarschallGneisenau]] ([[User talk:FeldmarschallGneisenau|talk]]) 04:28, 24 April 2024 (UTC)
:Anyone? @[[User:Piotrus|Piotrus]] MoS recommends 4-paragraph ledes. I want this article to be Featured quality, like [[Germany]]. [[User:FeldmarschallGneisenau|FeldmarschallGneisenau]] ([[User talk:FeldmarschallGneisenau|talk]]) 22:54, 2 May 2024 (UTC)
::@[[User:FeldmarschallGneisenau|FeldmarschallGneisenau]] If nobody replies, be bold and change it as you see fit. I do not have the time & will do review things at the moment (things being, compare both leads word by word), but feel free to ping me if there is any specific element or elements (sentences, phrasing, etc.) that folks want to review. <sub style="border:1px solid #228B22;padding:1px;">[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]]&#124;[[User talk:Piotrus|<span style="color:#7CFC00;background:#006400;"> reply here</span>]]</sub> 03:39, 3 May 2024 (UTC)
::Ps. I did have time to review the lead. I think this can be cut: "the Polish People's Republic was a founding signatory of the Warsaw Pact"; I think it is of trivial importance, and anyway, only USSR was the founding member that matters, every other country was a puppet state anyway. Instead, I'd suggest adding a few words about 19th century uprisings ([[January Uprising]], [[November Uprising]]) which IMHO are much more relevant to the Polish history than the Warsaw Pact. Similar to the above, I have my doubts whether " Poland is a founding member state of the United Nations" is relevant - being a UN member is trivial, and being its founding member seems like trivia, IMHO. WTO and OECD are, I guess, symbol status in the international arena, and EU and NATO of course matter from geopolitical perspective, so they are fine. Final comment about the proposed lead: it should include word (and link) for 'Slavic' somewhere. <sub style="border:1px solid #228B22;padding:1px;">[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]]&#124;[[User talk:Piotrus|<span style="color:#7CFC00;background:#006400;"> reply here</span>]]</sub> 03:46, 3 May 2024 (UTC)
:::I think it's OK to mention it because the Warsaw Pact was signed in Warsaw... which is a fact of some significance. [[User:FeldmarschallGneisenau|FeldmarschallGneisenau]] ([[User talk:FeldmarschallGneisenau|talk]]) 04:37, 3 May 2024 (UTC)
::::Maybe that would be good for the Warsaw article, you can say Poland was a part of the pact. [[User:O.maximov|O.maximov]] ([[User talk:O.maximov|talk]]) 13:18, 29 July 2024 (UTC)
:::::<sub>[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]]</sub> is right, be bold. [[User:O.maximov|O.maximov]] ([[User talk:O.maximov|talk]]) 13:18, 29 July 2024 (UTC)
:What are your suggestions? [[User:O.maximov|O.maximov]] ([[User talk:O.maximov|talk]]) 13:17, 29 July 2024 (UTC)
::@[[User:O.maximov|O.maximov]] Feld... is now indef blocked. (Tip: enable seeing if a user is blocked in the preference settings by having them displayed as crossed out, together with making redirects green and disambigs orange :P). <sub style="border:1px solid #228B22;padding:1px;">[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]]&#124;[[User talk:Piotrus|<span style="color:#7CFC00;background:#006400;"> reply here</span>]]</sub> 10:54, 31 July 2024 (UTC)
:::Thank you for the tip. Good to know. [[User:O.maximov|O.maximov]] ([[User talk:O.maximov|talk]]) 11:22, 31 July 2024 (UTC)
::::{{ping|Meellk}} {{ping|Piotrus}} - Instead of West Slavic in the lede can we utilise the term "[[Lechites|Lechitic]]" as the previous is more generic/ethnic and the latter refers particularly to Poland and closely related cultures/[[Lechitic languages|language]]/tribes and how they stood out across the [[Early Middle Ages|early medieval period]]. Of course, one does not exclude the other but Lechitic is more on point in terms of terminology. [[User:Merangs|Merangs]] ([[User talk:Merangs|talk]]) 21:50, 27 August 2024 (UTC)
:::::So in one instance (Polish-Soviet war) you prefer a more generic descriptor (emerged victorious in several wars yada yada). In this instance you prefer a more precise descriptor. It seems you're just hell-bent on reverting my edits, no matter if they were even inspired by me or by a much more experienced editor than either of us. I '''oppose''', Lechitic is obscure to a general reader, whereas West Slavic is clear. [[User:Meellk|Meellk]] ([[User talk:Meellk|talk]]) 15:20, 28 August 2024 (UTC)
:::I '''support''' Piotrus's proposition for including the word Slavic somewhere in the lede, if that wasn't clear. [[User:Meellk|Meellk]] ([[User talk:Meellk|talk]]) 15:25, 28 August 2024 (UTC)


== Is Poland a parliamentary republic or a semi-presidential one? ==
:::The issue is not a demographic one, though perhaps a political one. Interestingly, there is a link to the Feminism in Poland article under the Politics section. Maybe the same could be applied to the [[LGBT rights in Poland]] article. I agree with the part on perspective, but it's also important to note that Poland is among the main battlegrounds of the world when it comes to gay rights. Even though, on a world scale, we would say it is average, it has generated more gay rights debate and controversy than nearly any other country in the world in the past two years (for the record, I believe this is mostly unfair: Poland and Latvia are widely seen as the most problematic EU countries in gay rights, but other countries such as Bulgaria and Slovakia are not really even on the gay rights radar yet; extreme homophobia in Poland is more of a top-down, governmental thing). '''[[User:Ronline|Ronline]]''' [[User talk:Ronline|✉]] 16:54, 30 May 2007 (UTC)


Over on the talk page for List of countries by system of government, there was a debate going on about whether Poland was parliamentary or semi-presidential. Before, the consensus was that it was de jure parliamentary, but de facto semi-presidential. However, some people have argued that even de jure it is semi-presidential, and that ended up being the new consensus taken. For making things consistent and not confusing, I wanted to open up the discussion here too, and have people debate whether we should change it from parliamentary to semi-presidential. [[User:ICommandeth|ICommandeth]] ([[User talk:ICommandeth|talk]]) 09:02, 23 August 2024 (UTC)
::::Poland becomes ultra-catholic country, polish gays are affraid not only that they lose their wokr, but even life, English The Guardian wrote about it (see section Homophobia in Poland)


:Essentially, according to [https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Poland_2009?lang=en this source], the word "executive" is used explicitly to refer to the President's role, which fits in with the definition of a semi-presidential system, where the head of state is in charge of the executive and the head of government is in charge of the legislative branch. <span style="text-shadow:5px 5px 25px Black;font-family:Courier;font-weight:bold;font-size:110%">[[User:GlowstoneUnknown|<span style="color:#f44">– GlowstoneUnknown</span>]] [[User talk:GlowstoneUnknown|<span style="color:#f9f">(Talk)</span>]]</span> 12:07, 24 August 2024 (UTC)
It is not true and this information is wrongful for Poland. Gays dont affraid about theirs life. Homophopia is in Poland, that's right, but as rare event.
::See also:
::[https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1057/palgrave.fp.8200087.pdf Semi-Presidential Systems: Dual Executive And Mixed Authority Patterns] (Shugart, Matthew Søberg)
::"Even if the president has no discretion in the forming of cabinets or the right to dissolve parliament, his or her constitutional authority can be regarded as 'quite considerable' in Duverger's sense if cabinet legislation approved in parliament can be blocked by the people's elected agent. Such powers are especially relevant if an extraordinary majority is required to override a veto, as in Mongolia, Poland, and Senegal. In these cases, while the government is fully accountable to parliament, it cannot legislate without taking the potentially different policy preferences of the president into account."
::[[User:LVDP01|LVDP01]] ([[User talk:LVDP01|talk]]) 12:26, 24 August 2024 (UTC)
:::I was under the impression that the presidential veto wasn't enshrined in the Polish constitution, since as far as I know, that's part of the reason it was considered ''de jure'' parliamentary for as long as it was, since the presidential separation of powers was supposedly constitutional convention rather than binding law. <span style="text-shadow:5px 5px 25px Black;font-family:Courier;font-weight:bold;font-size:110%">[[User:GlowstoneUnknown|<span style="color:#f44">– GlowstoneUnknown</span>]] [[User talk:GlowstoneUnknown|<span style="color:#f9f">(Talk)</span>]]</span> 12:33, 24 August 2024 (UTC)
::::The veto is mentioned in the constitution in [https://www.sejm.gov.pl/prawo/konst/angielski/kon1.htm Article 122, section 5]:
::::"If the President of the Republic has not made reference to the Constitutional Tribunal in accordance with para. 3, he may refer the bill, with reasons given, to the Sejm for its reconsideration. If the said bill is repassed by the Sejm by a three-fifths majority vote in the presence of at least half of the statutory number of Deputies, then, the President of the Republic shall sign it within 7 days and shall order its promulgation in the Journal of Laws of the Republic of Poland (Dziennik Ustaw). If the said bill has been repassed by the Sejm, the President of the Republic shall have no right to refer it to the Constitutional Tribunal in accordance with the procedure prescribed in para. 3." [[User:HapHaxion|<b style="font-family: Tw Cen MT; color: FireBrick">HapHaxion</b>]] <sub>([[User talk:HapHaxion|talk]] / [[Special:Contribs/HapHaxion|contribs]])</sub> 17:07, 18 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::A presidential veto is present in several parliamentary republics. [[User:Meellk|Meellk]] ([[User talk:Meellk|talk]]) 18:19, 29 September 2024 (UTC)
::::::Presidential and semi-presidential systems have ''popularly elected'' president with one of significant executive powers listed above. If a president isn't popularly elected or doesn't have significant executive powers, it's parliamentary system. -- [[User:Svito3|Svito3]] ([[User talk:Svito3|talk]]) 16:30, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::Czechia has a popularly elected president with the exact same powers as the one in Poland [[Special:Contributions/83.6.206.183|83.6.206.183]] ([[User talk:83.6.206.183|talk]]) 02:43, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::::Czech Republic has started electing president relatively recently starting with [[2013 Czech presidential election]]. President of Czech Republic has much weaker veto power than president of Poland and it requires separate discussion if it qualifies as semi-presidential system. President of Poland can veto any bill for any reason, and that veto requires extraordinary majority to overcome. On that reason alone it's semi-presidential republic. For Czech Republic we need to find out if majority required to overcome veto is higher than one needed to pass the bill. It would of course fall under semi-presidential system if that's true on that feature alone. But that's for another discussion. [[User:Svito3|Svito3]] ([[User talk:Svito3|talk]]) 16:27, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::Presidential veto in Czechia is bypassed with 50% of the vote in the lower chamber, and in Poland 60% (not even 2/3). Not a big difference. Check out articles 133 and 146 of the Constitution of Poland. The executive lies squarely with the Council of Ministers. It's a parliamentary system where parliamentary elections matter most. The current PM of Poland wasn't even selected by the President but by Parliament [[Special:Contributions/83.6.206.183|83.6.206.183]] ([[User talk:83.6.206.183|talk]]) 18:43, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::This doesn't refute my point that president is popularly elected and has significant powers according to academic definition. -- [[User:Svito3|Svito3]] ([[User talk:Svito3|talk]]) 19:22, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::There is no single academic definition of a semi-presidential system. The official encyclopedia of Poland, Poland's Britannica, states that Poland's system is parliamentary. Likewise so do all the other secondary academic sources in Poland. Or are Polish sources considered inferior and unreliable as pertains to... the system in Poland? A semi-presidential system is characterized by the co-existence of President with Prime Minister, whereby the President appoints the Prime Minister and is clearly above the presidentially-nominated government, see France. Au contraire, the current Polish government for example, wasn't even appointed by the president, but by parliament, independently. The president served a ceremonial role - swearing-in. [[Special:Contributions/83.6.206.183|83.6.206.183]] ([[User talk:83.6.206.183|talk]]) 04:16, 7 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::Why is 60% vs 2/3 relevant here? They're both above 50% (the minimum to pass legislation normally) Czechia's veto is suspensatory, it just forces parliament to re-read the proposed legislation, the parliament can pass it again if the governing parties have even a single-seat majority. Poland's (under some circumstances) requires parliament to alter the legislation to appease non-government parties represented in the Sejm to support it unless the governing party/coalition has a supermajority. <span style="text-shadow:5px 5px 25px Black;font-family:Courier;font-weight:bold;font-size:110%">[[User:GlowstoneUnknown|<span style="color:#f44">– GlowstoneUnknown</span>]] [[User talk:GlowstoneUnknown|<span style="color:#f9f">(Talk)</span>]]</span> 03:00, 5 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::It's not 50% of the quorum though, but 50% of all seats i.e. absolute majority. The vast majority of bills pass without an absolute majority but rather with just a majority in the quorum (present deputies). It presents a stopgap. The Czech president can also refer a bill to the constitutional tribunal all the same. It's called checks and balances, having it doesn't mean it's a semi-presidential system though, that's asinine. A semi-presidential system is characterized by the co-existence of President with Prime Minister, whereby the President appoints the Prime Minister and is clearly above the presidentially-nominated government, see France. Au contraire, the current Polish government for example, wasn't even appointed by the president, but by parliament, independently. The president served a ceremonial role - swearing-in. [[Special:Contributions/83.6.206.183|83.6.206.183]] ([[User talk:83.6.206.183|talk]]) 04:14, 7 October 2024 (UTC)
:CONSTITUTION OF POLAND
:Chapter VI
:THE COUNCIL OF MINISTERS AND GOVERNMENT ADMINISTRATION
:Article 146
:1. The Council of Ministers shall conduct the internal affairs and foreign policy of the Republic of Poland.
:2. The Council of Ministers shall conduct the affairs of State not reserved to other State organs or local self-government.
:3. The Council of Ministers shall manage the government administration.
:etc. [[User:Meellk|Meellk]] ([[User talk:Meellk|talk]]) 18:27, 29 September 2024 (UTC)
:The Polish term for the structure of government in Poland is '''''system parlamentarno-gabinetowy''''' (cabinet-parliamentary system). The Polish equivalent of the Britannica, [[Encyklopedia PWN]], describes the system such (Google translation):
:''parliamentary-cabinet system, a set of political and constitutional principles defining the mutual relationship between parliament and the executive (head of state and government) in such a way that the government headed by the prime minister is appointed and dismissed by the head of state (monarch or president), and is politically accountable to parliament through a vote of no confidence; the executive has the right to dissolve parliament; the government is appointed from among the representatives of the party (or coalition) with a majority in parliament; the head of state is not politically accountable to parliament, but is accountable to members of the government who countersign his official acts.; the parliamentary-cabinet system was formed in the 18th century in Great Britain; it is currently found in Great Britain, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium, Greece, Spain, and the Scandinavian countries, among others; it dominated the Polish constitution of March 1921.''[https://encyklopedia.pwn.pl/haslo/;3954447.html] In other words, a parliamentary republic, like [[Italy]]. [[User:Meellk|Meellk]] ([[User talk:Meellk|talk]]) 18:37, 29 September 2024 (UTC)
::What matters is whether the President holds executive power or not and whether it's the President or the Parliament that names the head of government/the cabinet. We also have reliable sources and a consensus on another page that agree the country is semi-presidential. <span style="text-shadow:5px 5px 25px Black;font-family:Courier;font-weight:bold;font-size:110%">[[User:GlowstoneUnknown|<span style="color:#f44">– GlowstoneUnknown</span>]] [[User talk:GlowstoneUnknown|<span style="color:#f9f">(Talk)</span>]]</span> 00:45, 30 September 2024 (UTC)
:::Another page is another page. Too few users edit List pages to be relevant.
:::As for the executive, as article 146 and article 133 demonstrate, it lies chiefly with the Council of Ministers (which conducts both the internal and foreign affairs). The presidency is a mostly representative role, with the other role being that of a check&balance. The system in Poland is almost exactly the same as the one that formed in the Czech Republic, with the exception being that the presidential veto can be overridden with an absolute majority (50%) while in Poland - 60%. [[User:Meellk|Meellk]] ([[User talk:Meellk|talk]]) 14:34, 30 September 2024 (UTC)
::::Upon re-reading the article of the constitution that initially changed my mind to support semi-presidential (Article 10), I see that the executive is not solely vested in the hands of the President, but simultaneously in the President and the CoM, I'll change my support to "parliamentary" in that case. <span style="text-shadow:5px 5px 25px Black;font-family:Courier;font-weight:bold;font-size:110%">[[User:GlowstoneUnknown|<span style="color:#f44">– GlowstoneUnknown</span>]] [[User talk:GlowstoneUnknown|<span style="color:#f9f">(Talk)</span>]]</span> 14:42, 30 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::This doesn't refute points from Søberg cited by LVDP01 above. -- [[User:Svito3|Svito3]] ([[User talk:Svito3|talk]]) 16:05, 3 October 2024 (UTC)
:Furthermore-
:CONSTITUTION OF POLAND
:Chapter V
:THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF POLAND
:Article 133
:3. The President of the Republic shall cooperate with the Prime Minister and the appropriate minister in respect of foreign policy. [[User:Meellk|Meellk]] ([[User talk:Meellk|talk]]) 18:46, 29 September 2024 (UTC)
:Is nobody concerned with how reliable secondary sources describe Poland? That should be what is discussed here, rather than Wikipedia editors' own interpretations of the constitution. [[User:Phil Bridger|Phil Bridger]] ([[User talk:Phil Bridger|talk]]) 21:56, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
::The official encyclopedia of Poland, Poland's Britannica, states that Poland's system is parliamentary. Likewise so do all the other secondary academic sources in Poland. Or are Polish sources considered inferior and unreliable as pertains to... the system in Poland? [[Special:Contributions/83.6.206.183|83.6.206.183]] ([[User talk:83.6.206.183|talk]]) 04:15, 7 October 2024 (UTC)
:::They are still secondary sources, created by authors with an academic background. You cannot dismiss them simply because they are not Polish. To put words into our mouth that make it sound like we regard Polish sources as "inferior" is '''not''' constructive, and if anything this (along with creating another thread down below to demand for PavKIs's edit to be reverted, and calling our point of view "asinine") comes over as needlessly passive-aggressive.
:::PavKIs has correctly pointed out that the President of Poland has some genuine power that a regular parliamentary president would not, including that to ininitiate legislation, as confirmed by [https://www.president.pl/president/competences/official-acts a Polish government website]. Note how this list of official acts the president can do on his own also includes, I quote, "Designating and appointing the Prime Minister", as well as independently choosing and appointing members of several other offices (like those of several courts and of the National Monetary Council). Furthermore, while the Czech president's veto requires a regular majority to overcome (and thus, in practice, is largely a symbolic veto), the Polish presidential vote can only be overcome by a three-fifths supermajority. This effectively stops the bill dead in its tracks (those who voted against will do so again), unless it is modified to convince more parliamentarians to vote on it. This gives the President of Poland &ndash; popularly elected by the people &ndash; direct power to counteract the legislature.
:::You mention France as a consistent example of what a "real" semi-presidential republic should be like, but miss the fact that Portugal, Romania, Mongolia, and several former Portuguese colonies (East Timor, Cape Verde, São Tome and Príncipe) are ''also'' semi-presidential republics in spite of having a weaker presidency in comparison. Their presidencies do not have some of the powers that Macron has, such as to initiate legislation or to choose a PM freely, but they can still provide a direct check on the influence and will of parliament, such as by dissolving it (out of their own volition; in Portugal this is called "the nuclear bomb") or by issuing a veto that requires a supermajority to overcome. Not every semi-presidential system has to be a replica of the Fifth Republic. [[User:LVDP01|LVDP01]] ([[User talk:LVDP01|talk]]) 08:00, 7 October 2024 (UTC)
::::Czech president can also initiate legislation. It's mmeaningless, the bill can be "frozen" in a Sejm committee forever, parliament and government sets the domestic and foreign policy. Citizens themselves can also initiate legislation, and they're just as "powerless" as the president. Your claim that Poland is a semi-presidential systeem is disproved by empirical observation of the events in Poland - the president is powerless and does not affect neither domestic nor foreign policy in the slightest. The PM was not appointed by the president and is in direct opposition to the political movement he stems from. In fact the president himself was handpicked by Jarosław Kaczyński the leader of the PiS political party, and has never been a strong political figure. The fact that there are a few descriptions of Poland as a semi-presidential system isn't a consensus, as there is a whole consensus in Poland that it's a parliamentary system, so at best there is no general "international" consensus and we have to defer to the ''de jure'' status set in the Constitution - and it's quite explicitly put there that the President's role is to represent the state internationally, while it's the Council of Minister's role to conduct the executive role in domestic and foreign policy. The president does not own the executive as it happens in semi-presidential systems like France - he partakes in the executive merely as a check&balance [[Special:Contributions/83.6.206.183|83.6.206.183]] ([[User talk:83.6.206.183|talk]]) 04:20, 8 October 2024 (UTC)


== PM of Poland not even appointed by President - system is parliamentary not semi-presidential ==
:this information is true, gays in Poland are really afraid of they lifes, since ultra-nazi goverment raised some of polish gays were bitten by "unknown people", some were told to leave Poland if they want to stay alive (see [[LGBT_rights_in_Poland#Emigration]])


Kindly requesting any auto-confirmed user to correct a mistaken edit by user PavKIs. How can a system be semi-presidential when the PM wasn't even appointed by the president? And the constitution highlights that both foreign and domestic policy are matters of the PM and the President's role is to represent the state of Poland internationally... this is what the constitution says. The official encyclopedia of Poland, Poland's Britannica, the Encyklopedia PWN, agrees, and this is a reliable source, as well as all secondary academic sources in Poland agree that Poland is a parliamentary system. The system is alike that in the Czech Republic, where the president too is the commander in chief - but this is just a ceremonial position. Compare to France, where President is kingmaker unwaveringly. [[Special:Contributions/83.6.206.183|83.6.206.183]] ([[User talk:83.6.206.183|talk]]) 04:23, 7 October 2024 (UTC)
if homophobia is mentioned be sure to link it to the Wikipedia article on homophobia, where, presumably, one will find scientific support for such a word.[[User:142.68.42.24|142.68.42.24]] 22:08, 31 July 2007 (UTC)


== Infobox | start of Polish statehood 966 ==
==Demographics==
Has anyone else noticed that the Demographics and Culture sections are basically identical? What gives? <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/199.46.198.237|199.46.198.237]] ([[User talk:199.46.198.237|talk]]) 14:26, 24 August 2005 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP -->


The official start of Polish statehood was in the year 966 with the Baptism of Poland. This is an undisputed fact stated in virtually all mainstream history books, so why did someone add "Duchy of Poland c. 960"? I guess that editor is either advocating revisionist history or is anti-Christian and can't get over the fact that Poland's acceptance into the Christendom marked its formal beginning. There is 0 historical basis for this claim. [[Special:Contributions/94.172.109.57|94.172.109.57]] ([[User talk:94.172.109.57|talk]]) 13:58, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
*I added some information to the Culture section. No major changes. --[[User:Thomaspca|Thomaspca]] 16:53, 29 November 2006 (UTC)


:No mainstream historical book claims that 966 is a start of Polish statehood. This is impossible, Mieszko I was a ruler for couple years before his baptism and the state existed also before that. According to archelogical findings nowadays we date start of the Polish statehood at least at the 3rd-4th decade of the 10th century. [[User:Marcelus|Marcelus]] ([[User talk:Marcelus|talk]]) 14:06, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
== I added phones info ==


:: [[User:Marcelus]] your not even serious... read the article [[Millennium of the Polish State]] and all the sources cited there. Also, Britannica says "Mieszko accepted Roman Catholicism via Bohemia in 966. A missionary bishopric directly dependent on the papacy was established in Poznań. This was the true beginning of Polish history, for Christianity was a carrier of Western civilization with which Poland was henceforth associated." Great... we have revisionists writing this article now. --[[Special:Contributions/94.172.109.57|94.172.109.57]] ([[User talk:94.172.109.57|talk]]) 14:13, 15 October 2024 (UTC) Now you and [[user:FeldmarschallGneisenau]] who added this bogus claim will argue ad nauseam that the sky is red not blue and up is down. --[[Special:Contributions/94.172.109.57|94.172.109.57]] ([[User talk:94.172.109.57|talk]]) 14:17, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
Telephones - mobile cellular: 25,3 million (Raport Telecom Team 2005) <br>
Telephones - main lines in use: 12.5 million (Raport Telecom Team 2005) <br>
source: http://wiadomosci.onet.pl/1161177,10,item.html (in Polish)<br>
The information CIA World Fact Book is often very outdated or simply ridiculous


::: Here is PDF from the Institute of National Remembrance and guess what date it uses as the start.. 966: https://ipn.gov.pl/download/2/43696/PrzewodnikpohistoriiPolski.pdf --[[Special:Contributions/94.172.109.57|94.172.109.57]] ([[User talk:94.172.109.57|talk]]) 14:21, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
== Motto ==


: I'm not familiar with the early history of Poland so I'm not going to get involved too much in the discussion, just wanted to leave a link to a previous discussion on the topic in case it's useful [[Talk:Poland/Archive 6#Formation date]]. [[User:Suonii180|Suonii180]] ([[User talk:Suonii180|talk]]) 14:48, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
There is no official motto. Neither in the Constitiution, nor in any other document.
Please do not insert it again and again. [[User:Poszwa|Poszwa]] 02:27, 14 September 2005 (UTC)


Sources that confirm 966:
Is the motto not "Honor i Ojczyzna" (Honor and Fatherland)? I have this on many of my flags, both military and civilian.--[[User:Gpriest|Gpriest]] 15:07, 10 March 2006 (UTC)


*"The year 966, when Mieszko was baptised, is regarded as marking the origin of Poland as an independent, Christian, centralised state, following the model set up in Christian Europe." https://www.visegradgroup.eu/basic-facts-about/poland/brief-history-of-poland
:Nope, it's not a national motto. "Honor i Ojczyzna" or "Bóg, Honor, Ojczyzna" are slogans frequently featured on many (mostly military) banners and could be considered an (unofficial!) motto of the army, but not the state. Especially that the modern state is neutral when it comes to God's existence so it couldn't adopt such a motto anyway. [[User:Halibutt|Halibu]][[User talk:Halibutt|tt]] 03:35, 11 March 2006 (UTC)
*"966 - Duke Mieszko I, the historically recognised founder of the Polish state, adopts Catholic Christianity." https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-17754512
*"In the year 966, Duke Mieszko I (Mye-shcko), who ruled several Western Slavic tribes, decided to consolidate his power by being baptised in the Latin Rite and marrying Doubravka, a princess of Bohemia. This is symbolically regarded as the creation of the state of Poland." https://culture.pl/en/article/learn-the-history-of-poland-in-10-minutes
*"966 Prince Mieszko adopts Christianity; traditional date of origin of Polish." https://tile.loc.gov/storage-services/master/frd/frdcstdy/po/polandcountrystu00curt_0/polandcountrystu00curt_0.pdf


[[User:Marcelus]] you are dishonest and manipulative when you say that: "No mainstream historical books claims that 966 is a start of Polish statehood." There are multiple sources that say otherwise. But unfortunately there are deniers of Christianity and it's role in history. Editors like you damage Wikipedia's reliability because they push their revisionist fantasies instead of verifiable facts. --[[Special:Contributions/94.172.109.57|94.172.109.57]] ([[User talk:94.172.109.57|talk]]) 18:46, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
I have cuted my changes until the end of discussion at polish wiki.[[User:MaLu|MaLu]] 22:29, 23 September 2006 (UTC)
:Also, this is what the source currently attached to "Duchy of Poland c. 960" says in order to falsely back up the year in question: "The dukes (dux) were originally the commanders of an armed retinue (drużyna) with which they broke the authority of the chieftains of the clans, thus transforming the original tribal organization into a territorial unit." How, does that remotely support the year c. 960? Complete BS is being pushed onto Wikipedia. --[[Special:Contributions/94.172.109.57|94.172.109.57]] ([[User talk:94.172.109.57|talk]]) 11:29, 16 October 2024 (UTC)


== Previously used sources for Poland's supposed semi-presidentiality - removable ==
Hi, I'm from Poland and I wrote "God, Honour, Homeland" as motto. It is unofficial but believe me that it's always used as national motto. Poland was always catholic country and more than 90% of people in Poland are catholics, so word "God" isn't incorrect.


Poland did not strike me as a semi-presidential country. I thus went over the several sources supposedly backing Poland being a semi-presidential system. I found what follows:
I've looked everywhere on the internet and I've found: Stand in your faith, For your freedom and ours, and Don't forget us. Are any of those right??? <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/70.94.246.160|70.94.246.160]] ([[User talk:70.94.246.160|talk]]) 23:40, 11 December 2007 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
*1st source is just a link to the constitution, without any commentary - not only a primary source, it doesn't support the statement at all.
*2nd source is outdated and comes from before the current Constitution went in force.
*"3rd" faulty source is the same work (same title) by the same author, re-published, cited twice.
*4th source only academically discusses the features of semi-presidentiality in Poland, does not conclude Poland is semi-presidential, in fact clearly states the parliament (Sejm) picks the Prime Minister and most heavily weighs on government.
In view of this, I removed these citations whose source material either is faulty or deviates from the original statement.
Comparing with the nation's page on its own Wikipedia (the Polish Wikipedia) I found a source that backs the country being a parliamentary system. Going over the discussions in this Talk section, I found more sources for this. Having done my homework, with this research, I applied the edit. [[User:MaralagoPawn|Mr. Maralago pawn]] ([[User talk:MaralagoPawn|talk]]) 12:52, 16 November 2024 (UTC)


:May someone point me to where this user consensus is supposed to be? And on what sources is it based, since these have been discarded. I don't see any consensus here. Was there some RfC that was archived? [[User:MaralagoPawn|Mr. Maralago pawn]] ([[User talk:MaralagoPawn|talk]]) 20:56, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
==The most popular Polish web-portals==
::Those sources weren't discarded by anyone else but you. You have swapped all of those sources to push your POV. -- [[User:Svito3|Svito3]] ([[User talk:Svito3|talk]]) 14:07, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
:I'm gonna pull the people who took part in the discussion on [[Talk:List of countries by system of government]] and the previous discussion on this page in here to discuss this. I think I've stated before that I have no strong preferences towards either label, as long as it's consistent and the articles don't contradict each other, but just in case, I want to reiterate. Either label is fine as long as it can be backed up by secondary sources, I only want to stop any edit warring that leads to the two articles having conflicting information from different sources.
:'''Users:''' @[[User:Svito3|Svito3]], @[[User:Moxy|Moxy]] @[[User:Wtmitchell|Wtmitchell]] @[[User:ICommandeth|ICommandeth]] @[[User:LVDP01|LVDP01]] @[[User:Meellk|Meellk]]. <span style="text-shadow:5px 5px 25px Black;font-family:Courier;font-weight:bold;font-size:110%">[[User:GlowstoneUnknown|<span style="color:#f44">– GlowstoneUnknown</span>]] [[User talk:GlowstoneUnknown|<span style="color:#f9f">(Talk)</span>]]</span> 04:16, 23 November 2024 (UTC)
::Thinking that we need to see all the sources that have been discussed in one place (here) so we can evaluate them with others input. <span style="font-weight:bold;color:darkblue">[[User:Moxy|Moxy]]</span>🍁 04:19, 23 November 2024 (UTC)
:::I believe these 5 are the main ones that were used on both articles, but someone please correct me if there were more.
:::<ref>{{cite web |title=Poland 1997 (rev. 2009) |url=https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Poland_2009?lang=en |website=www.constituteproject.org |access-date=9 October 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last=Veser |first=Ernst |author-link=:de:Ernst Veser |date=23 September 1997 |title=Semi-Presidentialism-Duverger's Concept — A New Political System Model |url=https://www.rchss.sinica.edu.tw/files_news/11-01-1999/11_1_2.pdf|access-date=21 August 2017 |publisher=Department of Education, School of Education, [[University of Cologne]], zh |pages=39–60 |quote=Duhamel has developed the approach further: He stresses that the French construction does not correspond to either parliamentary or the presidential form of government, and then develops the distinction of 'système politique' and 'régime constitutionnel'. While the former comprises the exercise of power that results from the dominant institutional practice, the latter is the totality of the rules for the dominant institutional practice of power. In this way, France appears as 'presidentialist system' endowed with a 'semi-presidential regime' (1983: 587). By this standard, he recognizes Duverger's ''pléiade'' as semi-presidential regimes, as well as Poland, Romania, Bulgaria and Lithuania (1993: 87). }}</ref><ref name="Draft">{{cite journal |last=Shugart |first=Matthew Søberg |author-link=Matthew Søberg Shugart |date=September 2005 |title=Semi-Presidential Systems: Dual Executive and Mixed Authority Patterns |url=http://dss.ucsd.edu/~mshugart/semi-presidentialism.pdf |journal=Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080819200307/http://dss.ucsd.edu/~mshugart/semi-presidentialism.pdf |archive-date=19 August 2008 |access-date=21 August 2017 }}</ref><ref name="Shugart2005">{{cite journal |last=Shugart |first=Matthew Søberg |author-link=Matthew Søberg Shugart |date=December 2005 |title=Semi-Presidential Systems: Dual Executive And Mixed Authority Patterns |url=https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1057%2Fpalgrave.fp.8200087.pdf |journal=French Politics |volume=3 |issue=3 |pages=323–351 |doi=10.1057/palgrave.fp.8200087 |doi-access=free |access-date=21 August 2017 |quote=Even if the president has no discretion in the forming of cabinets or the right to dissolve parliament, his or her constitutional authority can be regarded as 'quite considerable' in Duverger's sense if cabinet legislation approved in parliament can be blocked by the people's elected agent. Such powers are especially relevant if an extraordinary majority is required to override a veto, as in Mongolia, Poland, and Senegal. In these cases, while the government is fully accountable to Parliament, it cannot legislate without taking the potentially different policy preferences of the president into account. }}</ref><ref name="McMenamin" >{{cite web |last=McMenamin |first=Iain |title=Semi-Presidentialism and Democratisation in Poland |url= http://webpages.dcu.ie/~mcmenami/Poland_semi-presidentialism_2.pdf |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20120212225305/http://webpages.dcu.ie/~mcmenami/Poland_semi-presidentialism_2.pdf |archive-date=12 February 2012 |publisher=School of Law and Government, [[Dublin City University]] |access-date=11 December 2017 }}</ref> <span style="text-shadow:5px 5px 25px Black;font-family:Courier;font-weight:bold;font-size:110%">[[User:GlowstoneUnknown|<span style="color:#f44">– GlowstoneUnknown</span>]] [[User talk:GlowstoneUnknown|<span style="color:#f9f">(Talk)</span>]]</span> 04:23, 23 November 2024 (UTC)
::::the now used 4 sources are (for posterity):
::::<ref>{{Cite book |author = Wiesław Skrzydło |title = Ustrój polityczny RP w świetle Konstytucji z 1997 r |publisher = Wolters Kluwer Polska Sp. z o.o. |date = 2008 |page = 69 |isbn = 978-83-7526-573-6}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=system parlamentarno-gabinetowy |url=https://encyklopedia.pwn.pl/haslo/;3954447.html |publisher=Polskie Wydawnictwo Nauk}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Konstytucja RP |url=https://encyklopedia.pwn.pl/haslo/Konstytucja-Rzeczypospolitej-Polskiej;3925275.html |publisher=Encyklopedia PWN}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |author = Leszek Garlicki |title = Polish constitutional law |publisher = Liber |date = 2007 |page = 25 |isbn = 978-83-7206-142-3}}</ref> [[Special:Contributions/2A00:F41:1CE5:603F:5997:40B1:4CCD:5EAC|2A00:F41:1CE5:603F:5997:40B1:4CCD:5EAC]] ([[User talk:2A00:F41:1CE5:603F:5997:40B1:4CCD:5EAC|talk]]) 19:15, 23 November 2024 (UTC)
::::It's late here and I do not have the time to discuss the "faultiness" of these sources, nor the energy to immediately inspect them. Until further discussion can happen though (to which I would like to invite to Svito3, since they could explain fairly well why they believed Poland to be semi-presidential), I did find this: as reported [https://notesfrompoland.com/2023/10/26/polish-president-announces-date-of-new-parliament-but-delays-naming-prime-minister/ in this article] (which described events of barely a year ago), the President of Poland ''can'' designate the prime minister. This PM must survive a confidence vote within two weeks of being chosen; should they lose, parliament decides the PM. The President generally invested the leader of the winning party for much of Polish history, but this seems to be entirely by informal convention; the President is clearly capable of designating someone else, and even if he ultimately chose not to, Duda seems to have at least considered to designate a PM from the second largest party instead, bypassing PiS in doing so.
::::The Constitution of Poland corroborates this:
::::<hr/>
::::<blockquote>
::::Article 154 [Nomination of the Prime Minister]
::::(1) The President of the Republic '''shall nominate''' a Prime Minister who shall propose the composition of a Council of Ministers. The President of the Republic shall, within 14 days of the first sitting of the House of Representatives (Sejm) or acceptance of the resignation of the previous Council of Ministers, appoint a Prime Minister together with other members of a Council of Ministers and accept the oaths of office of members of such newly appointed Council of Ministers.
::::(2) The Prime Minister shall, within 14 days following the day of his appointment by the President of the Republic, submit a program of activity of the Council of Ministers to the House of Representatives (Sejm), together with a motion requiring a vote of confidence. The House of Representatives (Sejm) shall pass such vote of confidence by an absolute majority of votes in the presence of at least half of the statutory number of Deputies.
::::(3) In the event that a Council of Ministers has not been appointed pursuant to Paragraph (1) above or has failed to obtain a vote of confidence in accordance with Paragraph (2) above, the House of Representatives (Sejm), within 14 days of the end of the time periods specified in Paragraphs (1) and (2), shall choose a Prime Minister as well as members of the Council of Ministers as proposed by him, by an absolute majority of votes in the presence of at least half of the statutory number of Deputies. The President of the Republic shall appoint the Council of Ministers so chosen and accept the oaths of office of its members.
::::</blockquote>
::::<hr/>
::::It clearly says that the President gets to choose a PM (1) and that the ultimate choice only falls to the legislature should the President's candidate lose a confidence vote (3).
::::A directly elected president with the ability to choose a PM and block legislation (through a veto that requires a supermajority, preventing the law from simply being passed again) is ''textbook'' semi-presidential. [[User:LVDP01|LVDP01]] ([[User talk:LVDP01|talk]]) 21:16, 23 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::The same rights are bestowed upon the presidents of Austria and the Czech Republic - both widely designated as parliamentary systems. [[Special:Contributions/2A00:F41:1C37:C415:B9E9:8DAB:6953:1091|2A00:F41:1C37:C415:B9E9:8DAB:6953:1091]] ([[User talk:2A00:F41:1C37:C415:B9E9:8DAB:6953:1091|talk]]) 16:05, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::just copying what was written above (in support of Poland being a parliamentary system):
:::::* CONSTITUTION OF POLAND
:::::Chapter V
:::::THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF POLAND
:::::Article 133
:::::3. The President of the Republic shall cooperate with the Prime Minister and the appropriate minister in respect of foreign policy.
:::::Chapter VI
:::::THE COUNCIL OF MINISTERS AND GOVERNMENT ADMINISTRATION
:::::Article 146
:::::1. The Council of Ministers shall conduct the internal affairs and foreign policy of the Republic of Poland.
:::::2. The Council of Ministers shall conduct the affairs of State not reserved to other State organs or local self-government.
:::::3. The Council of Ministers shall manage the government administration. [[Special:Contributions/2A00:F41:1C37:C415:B9E9:8DAB:6953:1091|2A00:F41:1C37:C415:B9E9:8DAB:6953:1091]] ([[User talk:2A00:F41:1C37:C415:B9E9:8DAB:6953:1091|talk]]) 16:08, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::worth also pointing out what [[User:Phil Bridger]] said "Is nobody concerned with how reliable secondary sources describe Poland? That should be what is discussed here, rather than Wikipedia editors' own interpretations of the constitution." [[Special:Contributions/2A00:F41:1C37:C415:B9E9:8DAB:6953:1091|2A00:F41:1C37:C415:B9E9:8DAB:6953:1091]] ([[User talk:2A00:F41:1C37:C415:B9E9:8DAB:6953:1091|talk]]) 16:11, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
::Thanks for linking that article List of countries by system of government , and showing it to me. The same faulty sources are copied there, so it clearly needs to be changed just as this page was. [[User:MaralagoPawn|Mr. Maralago pawn]] ([[User talk:MaralagoPawn|talk]]) 17:56, 23 November 2024 (UTC)
:Søberg source at least defines what semi-presidential system is and how it's different from both parliamentary system and presidential system. Even if Poland has changed since then argument and definitions apply unless you can find better and similarly comprehensive source for distinctions between those systems.
:Encyclopedia PWN simply says Poland is parliamentary republic with no explanation of neither what semi-presidential system is nor why Poland is parliamentary republic. It's not a subject of Encyclopedia PWN articles to even study these systems, nor we have any idea from their article if their writer is aware of these concepts. -- [[User:Svito3|Svito3]] ([[User talk:Svito3|talk]]) 13:53, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
:@[[User:Svito3|Svito3]] @[[User:LVDP01|LVDP01]] @[[User:MaralagoPawn|MaralagoPawn]] @[[User:Moxy|Moxy]] @[[User:ICommandeth|ICommandeth]] @[[User:Wtmitchell|Wtmitchell]] @[[User:Meellk|Meellk]] Can we just sort this out so it doesn't keep going back and forth please? I'd like to establish a clear consensus on what sources are to be used and what aren't and the reasons for or against each label. <span style="text-shadow:5px 5px 25px Black;font-family:Courier;font-weight:bold;font-size:110%">[[User:GlowstoneUnknown|<span style="color:#f44">– GlowstoneUnknown</span>]] [[User talk:GlowstoneUnknown|<span style="color:#f9f">(Talk)</span>]]</span> 06:43, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
::Sure. I can take a look in the weekend.
::Note that MaralagoPawn was identified as a sockpuppet and is now blocked. [[User:LVDP01|LVDP01]] ([[User talk:LVDP01|talk]]) 10:07, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
:::Having taken a look myself, I am currently inclined to stick to the academic sources used to uphold Poland as a semi-presidential country. OP mentioned that these sources have become outdated since they predate current the constitution, but did not specify ''why'' they are now outdated (i.e. which change in the constitution led to a switch to parliamentarianism).
:::Søberg points out that even if Poland's president has less discretion in forming a cabinet, they still possess a veto that requires a supermajority to overcome, including one that they can use for policy preference/disagreement. The official Polish parliament's website [https://www.sejm.gov.pl/english/prace/lp7.htm corroborates this], as does [https://www.president.pl/president/competences/the-president-on-the-adopted-laws the presidential website]; subsequently, I believe that Søberg's conclusion is still usable. [[User:LVDP01|LVDP01]] ([[User talk:LVDP01|talk]]) 19:09, 7 December 2024 (UTC)
::I agree. Maybe we can hold a big meeting to discuss all this, not just for Poland but other countries that seem to get swept up in this, like austria [[User:ICommandeth|ICommandeth]] ([[User talk:ICommandeth|talk]]) 15:20, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
{{reflist-talk}}


== Polland not Poland ==
I removed this part because it is of no use to non-Polish-speaking readers and was constantly attracting spam links. [[User:Poszwa|Poszwa]] 13:57, 17 September 2005 (UTC)


The name of the Polish state was incorrectly translated into English as Poland, long time ago. The correct name should be Polland with double "l" because it's the land of the Polish people, not the land of a "Po" people. Similar to that, the following names were created:
::Good idea. [[User:Halibutt|Halibu]][[User talk:Halibutt|tt]] 15:03, 17 September 2005 (UTC)
Finland Fin + land
Holland Hol + land
Switzerland Switzer + land and so on
A big mistake was made long time ago. Poland should change its name into Polland. [[Special:Contributions/49.190.246.76|49.190.246.76]] ([[User talk:49.190.246.76|talk]]) 04:33, 17 November 2024 (UTC)
:It is not our job to change that, even if what you say is true. See [[WP:RGW]]. [[User:Phil Bridger|Phil Bridger]] ([[User talk:Phil Bridger|talk]]) 09:50, 17 November 2024 (UTC)
:Take it up with the United Nations and the Republic of Poland, if they agree to change the country's official English name, the same can happen to this article. <span style="text-shadow:5px 5px 25px Black;font-family:Courier;font-weight:bold;font-size:110%">[[User:GlowstoneUnknown|<span style="color:#f44">– GlowstoneUnknown</span>]] [[User talk:GlowstoneUnknown|<span style="color:#f9f">(Talk)</span>]]</span> 04:06, 23 November 2024 (UTC)


== Semi-protected edit request on 12 December 2024 ==
== Poland's GDP ==


{{Edit semi-protected|Poland|answered=yes}}
Is Poland's GDP really $512.9 billion?
The government in Poland is a unitary parliamentary republic, not a semi-presidental republic even if it has elements similar to this system. The elements that declares the parliamentary system in Poland are written in the Polish constitution.


sorces:
::Yes, this is the 2005 GDP (PPP) value according to the International Monetary Fund. The estimation for 2006 is $546.5 billion. Here is the link:
https://www.gov.pl/web/civilservice/basic-information-about-poland
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2005/02/data/dbcoutm.cfm?SD=2005&ED=2006&R1=1&R2=1&CS=3&SS=2&OS=C&DD=0&OUT=1&C=941-946-137-122-181-124-138-964-182-423-935-128-936-961-939-184-172-132-134-174-144-944-178-136-112&S=PPPWGT&CMP=0&x=80&y=8
https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parliamentary_republic
chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://pkw.gov.pl/uploaded_files/1450053460_konstytucja_rzeczypospolitej_polskiej.pdf [[User:TheKamines|TheKamines]] ([[User talk:TheKamines|talk]]) 16:05, 12 December 2024 (UTC)


:Your first edit in all of Wikipedia's history is to this talk page, suspiciously briefly after a sockpuppet with the same opinion was caught and blocked.
== History ==
:You're not even trying to hide it. [[User:LVDP01|LVDP01]] ([[User talk:LVDP01|talk]]) 20:19, 12 December 2024 (UTC)

::Looking over this message again, I realize that the last sentence was unnecessary and likely appears unintentionally rude, so I take that back.
*The history of the transition from "communism" to "democracy" is seriously flawed. It makes no mention of the fact that Solidarnosc had been an essentially different organization between its day as a radical labor movement in the early 1980s and when it won elections as a conservative, capitalist-inclined electoral force. Worse, it suggests that the shock therapy "during the early 1990s enabled the country to transform its economy into a robust market economy." In fact, it created enormous economic ruin and inequality (which is normal for a market economy, but not especially robust). Since the page is locked, I do not know how to fix these flaws.
::Nonetheless, I consider sockpuppetry likely, and have thus requested an investigation. [[User:LVDP01|LVDP01]] ([[User talk:LVDP01|talk]]) 20:55, 12 December 2024 (UTC)

:[[File:X mark.svg|20px|link=|alt=]] '''Not done for now''': please establish a [[Wikipedia:Consensus|consensus]] for this alteration '''[[Wikipedia:Edit requests|before]]''' using the {{Tlx|Edit semi-protected}} template.<!-- Template:ESp --> [[User:M.Bitton|M.Bitton]] ([[User talk:M.Bitton|talk]]) 01:35, 13 December 2024 (UTC)
*The "History" section of this article suffers from what I call the "exponential effect"--an increasing amount of space is devoted to events as the dicussion moves from Polish prehistory to the present. While it's true that we know more about recent events than past events, this is not an issue at this high level of detail. I think the section should be rewritten in a more uniform level of detail. I'll try to get around to it sometime if no one else does. [[User:Appleseed|Appleseed]] 17:51, 22 September 2005 (UTC)

is saying that poland was not controlled by jews but russia was controlled by jews for 2000 years very anti semitic it is probably vandalism[[User:Bouse23|Bouse23]] 11:26, 25 January 2007 (UTC)
*This horrible article does not mention one word about Polish collaberation with the Nazis in the Holocaust. Please refer to the book Neighbors!!!!! The article also doesn't mention that unlike any other nation in Europe the Holocaust continued in Poland even after Germany lost the war. Polish anti-semitism made possible genocide of Jews until at least 1950. <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/65.35.27.83|65.35.27.83]] ([[User talk:65.35.27.83|talk]]) 00:48, 22 August 2006 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP -->


:Well... why don't we mention about the collaboration of some Jews with the Nazis while we are at it, this happened as well. It doesn't matter who one was, what mattered was was he/she a good or a bad person, never mind the background. The Holocaust lasted during the war only and was run by the Nazi Germans, please do not spread those unfounded lies around. You obviously have no idea what you're talking about and see this part of our history from a very specific point of view. Also - please sign your posts, show some respect to others discussing here. --[[User:Pitdog|Pitdog]] 20:27, 5 February 2007 (UTC)


:That is a lie. Don't know where you've read, don't really care. This is crap, especially when you consider that after IIWW Poland was under communist reign. What is more many Poles have helped the Jews during the Nazi occupation and circa 1/3 of the Israeli Yad Vashem (sp?) Institute medal receivees are from Poland. [[User:212.76.37.152|212.76.37.152]] 23:26, 3 February 2007 (UTC)prorok lebioda


*Nothing has been included about the declaration of Marshall Law in 1981! and Shock therpy caused many of the social problems that Poland sufferes from today whilst contributing to the formation of an elite corrupt class mainly composed of the ex-communists (CFRU) <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/62.179.62.107|62.179.62.107]] ([[User talk:62.179.62.107|talk]]) 12:44, 19 December 2006 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP -->

fvbres

== Recent 'President' Reverts ==
I cannot beleive how silly the recent reverts regarding the presidency have been. Kwasniewski will remain president until the end of the year when Kaczynski is sworn in. Kaczynski is the President (elect) until that time, and Kwasniewski is still the president. Encyclopedias are supposed to refect fact. - not fantasy.
It seems obvious that the solution to this problem is to insert a line into the table to reflect that Kaczynski is President (elect) - (despite the fact that some may not like it).
I'm not good with tables but I'll try to change it. If it doesn't work perhaps somebody with a mature approach to editing might want to make the change. [[User:Adz|Adz]] 12:47, 24 October 2005 (UTC)

:I don’t think that adding ‘President-elect’ and 'Prime minister-designate' is necessary. This is a short and strict table and IMHO should only contain info about current officeholders.
--[[User:Myszodorn|Myszodorn]] 15:40, 25 October 2005 (UTC)

why the map of border change after WWII shows Gdansk as the teritory which was a part of Germany? I thought it had been free town?

== Vandalism ==
Well, I don't understand why some vandalism that I thought I'd reverted still persisted. Odd. Maybe I did click the wrong link. It's possible. But this is the second time this has happened. Oh well. I'll give the Wikipedia software the benefit of the doubt once more. --[[User:A bit iffy|A bit iffy]] 21:59, 24 October 2005 (UTC)

== Geography ==

Could someone add a better map for this country? This seems to me to be a problem for most country and city entries throughout Wikipedia, there are no decent maps. The "administrative map" given here shows very few cities and no detail. Location maps for cities within Poland often show just a silhouette of the country with a dot giving an approximate location of the city. These lacks of detail make it difficult for anyone to get an idea on geography. [[User:DJProFusion|DJProFusion]]
:Since it is more diffucult to create a graphical image then to write text, we have fewer images then we would like. Feel free to create one or search for one that is available under open licencse (or ask owners of those which are not to change their license).--[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]] <sup><font color="green">[[User_talk:Piotrus|Talk]]</font></sup> 16:58, 24 November 2005 (UTC)

== Llist of cities ==

I think the detailed list of 40+ cities is unnecessary and makes the article messy. Lets keep only the small table with the voivodships and their capitals and if someone wants to see a more complete list of cities, they can visit http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cities_in_Poland

Any comments?
[[User:MD|MD]]


Just to clarify. Kaliningrad Oblast is NOT an enclave, its half-enclave, because it have a sea connection to Russia. It's a detail but it's really two diffrent things.

:Not "half-enclave" but [[exclave]] [[User:Radomil|Radomil]] <small>[[User talk:Radomil|talk]]</small> 19:20, 28 March 2007 (UTC)

== English City Names ==

Why are you using the Polish city forms in the English names, and reverting changes? I don't care for your blind Polish nationalism imposing things on the English language. Here is how I see it:

1, The English language lacks the special characters in use in the majority of those names.<br />
2, The English language lacks the basic SOUNDS as in Szczecin, and we say it as 'Stettin'. English IS a Germanic language, you see.<br />
3, I have never seen the Polish city forms used in English atlases, only German or English-modified German forms (IE, Dantsic).<br />

So stop trying to impose your versions of city names on the English wiki. [[User:Antman|Antman]] 20:26, 11 December 2005 (UTC)

List:

Szczecin is pronounced 'Stettin' in English, and most Atlases use 'Stettin'.<br />
Gdansk USED to be used as 'Danzig' in English, but after the Cold War we began to use Gdansk (no accent).<br />
Wroclaw, we can't really make those sounds, most people I know who come from there who aren't Polish (German-ancestry or people referencing it) say Breslau.<br />

We also don't use accented characters because our keyboards cannot easily make them. [[User:Antman|Antman]] 20:29, 11 December 2005 (UTC)

Well British Embassy in Warsaw and US Departament of State has different opinion about those names than You. I belive them. [[User:Radomil|Radomil]] <small>[[User talk:Radomil|talk]]</small> 21:28, 11 December 2005 (UTC)

Why are you even editing here; this is an English Wiki. [[User:Antman|Antman]] 22:42, 11 December 2005 (UTC)

No arguments? Is it so painfull? [[User:Radomil|Radomil]] <small>[[User talk:Radomil|talk]]</small> 23:21, 11 December 2005 (UTC)

I realise rationality may be misplaced here, but... Antman's argument that Standard German forms should be used, since English is a Germanic language, is so specious as to be frankly laughable; one point does not follow from the other. Suffice it to say that modern English doesn't even use the German forms for all ''German'' cities --- often it's anglicised French ([[Cologne]] for Köln, [[Vienna]] for Wien, [[Munich]] for München). As for the cities we're actually dealing with, I think it would be fairest to say that there are ''no'' English words for these cities, because people without some personal connection to them or the country they are in (unlike, say, Paris, Rome or even Warsaw) are unlikely to have even heard of them, much less know what to call them. There are two Polish cities which have clear, well-known English names: Warsaw and Cracow (and even the latter you see written more and more as "Kraków" nowadays). As for the rest, people who don't know anybody from the region will go by local usage, however hard it may be to pronounce. Incidentally, English speakers are perfectly capable of making every sound in the word "Szczecin" on its own, they're just not used to the spelling or order. Oh, and any claims along the lines of "most atlases use..." will be ignored without citations. ~[[User:Jiminy Krikkitt|'''J''']].'''[[User talk:Jiminy Krikkitt|K]]'''. 00:58, 12 December 2005 (UTC)

:No. It is more often "Krakow" than "Cracow", and more often "Cracow" than "Kraków", in English. But that's just part of a general getting away from changing K to C, in both personal names and place names, though nobody ever complains yet about noisy [[krikitt]]s outside of Wikipedia. Both Cracow and Krakow deserve mention as English spellings; nothing is added by throwing in a Polish spelling. Krakov also has a fair amount of use, but Cracov and Krakóv are much rarer. [[User:Gene Nygaard|Gene Nygaard]] 08:10, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

I believe that this issue is resolved by the [[Talk:Gdansk/Vote]]. In the modern, post 1945, Szczecin is Szczecin, not Settin.--[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]] <sup><font color="green">[[User_talk:Piotrus|Talk]]</font></sup> 02:31, 12 December 2005 (UTC)


: Questioning people's right to contribute to Wikipedia is not [[WP:CIV|civil]] and doesn't help wikipedia. Anybody with any level of competency in English [[Wikipedia:Speakers of other languages|can, and should be encouraged, to contribute to the English Wikipedia]]. A diversity of sources provides a much richer diversity in information that can be contributed and shared. It also contributes to a greater number of perspectives. Apart from the fact that wikipedians in various parts of the world are able to contribute various types of information by virtue of the fact that they are located closer to alternative (non-English) information sources, and that they can translate those sources, wikipedians from non-English speaking backgrounds contribute to countering [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Countering systemic bias|systemic bias]], [[ethnocentrism]], and consequently a less [[WP:POV]] Wikipedia. Wikipedians from various backgrounds are valued and are to be encouraged!
: I don't support either side of nationalist disputes. I think they are embarrassing and there are often a simple NPOV solutions if only cool minds prevailed. It's unfortunate that on some issues it seems all too difficult for people to work together. I think it wouldn't hurt to read the [[WP:CIV]] and [[Wikipedia:Etiquette]] pages from time to time.
:-- [[User:Adz|Adz]] 07:50, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

: Even many young Germans use the name Wroclaw instead of Breslau.
[[User:Xx236|Xx236]] 12:19, 13 January 2006 (UTC)

The translations of Polish province names into English! Good God! Where did we get these aberrations from? Cuiavian-Pomerania? Never heard of it in all my life!
Let's just stick to the Polish names (minus the accented letters). Whatever next? The Boat's Voivodship or the Holy Cross Voivodship! It's like the Polish translator's passion for turning 'ul. Mickiewicza' into 'Mickiewicz Street'. Like one translates 'Bahnhofstrasse' into 'Bahnhof Street' or 'Rue de Paix' into 'Peace Road'. Or indeed 'Oxford Circus' into 'Cyrk Oksfordski' or 'Marlborough Street' into 'ul. Marlborough'a'

Michael Dembinski

:Micheal, welcome to Wiki. You may want to create an account and raise this issue at [[Wikipedia talk:Polish Wikipedians' notice board|our noticeboard]]. Also, note that there are the [[Holy Cross Mountains]]...--[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]] <sup><font color="green">[[User_talk:Piotrus|Talk]]</font></sup> 18:01, 26 March 2006 (UTC)

Hi Piotr (the name is spelt 'Michael')
I have signed up. I am keen to see the principle of reciprocity on Wikipedia. The Polish site does not attempt to translate British place names into Polish, other than London/Londyn. So why the attempts to translate Polish place names into English (other than Warszawa/Warsaw)?

(BTW I find it amusing that the very Poles who get upset by Australians' pronounciation of their highest peak as "Mount Koskee-usko" are also vehement that the northernmost stop on the Warsaw metro be pronounced "Plats Veelsona" rather than "Łylsona")


The names of Polish cities should remain as they are in Polish. Szczecin should remain as Szczecin. The term 'Stettin' is usually only found in older atlases and this is because of the Germanic connection - it should now be considered offensive to use the German name for this Polish city. The same obviously applies to Wrocław (Wroclaw, Breslau) and so on. I can, however, understand not using Polish characters because not all PCs are set up to show Central European characters but the correct Polish spelling should at least be put in brackets. [[User:Xania|Xania]] 21:08, 19 September 2006 (UTC)

I do not agree that capital city of Poland is Warsaw. Name should be use as it is in original language: Warszawa. Did you see italians call Rome a Rzym or Italy a Wlochy? If Antman cannot pronunounce Szczecin, it is his problem, we will not change name to make him happy. Jacek T. ( don't call me Jack, Altman ) <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/203.59.117.20|203.59.117.20]] ([[User talk:203.59.117.20|talk]]) 12:31, 22 October 2007 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

== It not is a real history of Poland. It is a sweet idyllic "syrup". What about polish serfdom? ==

"The citizens of Poland took pride in their ancient freedoms and parliamentary system, although the Szlachta monopolised most of the benefits. Since that time Poles have regarded freedom as their most important value. Poles often call themselves the nation of the free people."

Authors have overlooked that the most part of Poles since the middle of the fourteenth century were serfs. The serfdom was severe.
Landowners gained almost unlimited ownership over serfs.
The Polish expansion on the East, in ancient russian princedoms, carried the serfdom to the Ukrainians and Belorussians [[User:Ben-Velvel|Ben-Velvel]] 13:41, 5 January 2006 (UTC)

read a bit before making comments. serfdom developed in second half odf XV and the begining of XVI century, while the countries (Poland and Lithuania) were bound already. Ukraininas and Belorussians were governed from Vilinus at that time.

:Was [[Galich Rus']] annexed by Poles or by Lithuanians in the 14th century? Also, I don't think that "The Polish expansion on the East, carried the serfdom to the Ukrainians and Belorussians." statement is correct, as [[Russian serfdom]] developed rather independently (the article cleary states ''The origins of serfdom in Russia are traced to Kievan Rus in the 11th century.''). Besides, Serfdom came with feudalism, and spread through entire Europe, one nation carrying it to another, etc. --[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]] <sup><font color="green">[[User_talk:Piotrus|Talk]]</font></sup> 17:40, 5 January 2006 (UTC)
:: In Kievan Rus' relations between the peasant and the landowner did not developed in the serfdom. There were only preconditions of strengthening of dependence of the peasant from the landowner. Then there was a destructive Mongol-Tatar invasion and as a result the serfdom in eastern Russia was generated in the beginning of 17th century only. However since Mongol-Tatar invasion the former western Russian princedoms went under rule of Poland and Lithuania and received the serfdom from Poland. In any case the medieval nation cannot be named the nation of the free people [[User:Ben-Velvel|Ben-Velvel]] 23:20, 8 January 2006 (UTC)
::: I replied to your specific points at the [[Talk:History of Poland]]. I do agree that the following fragment should be revised, as it is both POVed and unreferenced: ''Since that time Poles have regarded freedom as their most important value. Poles often call themselves the nation of the free people''. I won't object to it's removal.--[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]] <sup><font color="green">[[User_talk:Piotrus|Talk]]</font></sup> 01:43, 9 January 2006 (UTC)
:::: "Russian"????????
[[User:Xx236|Xx236]] 12:25, 13 January 2006 (UTC)

"went under rule of Poland and Lithuania and received the serfdom from Poland."
Lithuania used to have its laws. When did Lithuania accept Polish laws regarding peasants? What was the name of the law?
[[User:Xx236|Xx236]] 13:54, 16 January 2006 (UTC)

==Polish National Government==
Hello. I new user has just created [[Polish National Government]]. I cannot immediately verify whether or not the page is factual or has any merit. I notice that this new user has already been warned once today about alleged vandalism to a user page. I hope that someone here will check out the page. Please let me know if it should be deleted. Thank you, [[User:Johntex|Johntex]]\<sup>[[User_talk:Johntex|talk]]</sup> 22:06, 11 January 2006 (UTC)
:Tnx. We added it to [[Portal:Poland/New article announcements]]. It is probably a good entry, if on a stub-level.--[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]] <sup><font color="green">[[User_talk:Piotrus|Talk]]</font></sup> 00:34, 12 January 2006 (UTC)


read a bit before making comments. serfdom developed in the begining of XVI century, while the countries were bound already.

== Mieszko I ==

Was Mieszko I only a prince his whole life or did he become a king later? [[User:Informationguy|Informationguy]]
:AFAIK he was a prince only, it was his son [[Bolesław I Chrobry]] who was the first king of Poland.--[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]] <sup><font color="green">[[User_talk:Piotrus|Talk]]</font></sup> 00:35, 12 January 2006 (UTC)
:Mieszko I died shortly before his scheduled coronation.

== Let's remove the History part ==

There is the text History of Poland. Why to keep an another text, containing errors - Russia (should be Rus or Halich) or Kazimierz Wielki.
[[User:Xx236|Xx236]] 12:22, 13 January 2006 (UTC)
:Every country article should have a history section. Correct the errors, instead of deleting the content.--[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]] <sup><font color="green">[[User_talk:Piotrus|Talk]]</font></sup> 22:15, 13 January 2006 (UTC)
It's very hard to manage two different coherent articles. Probably the only way is to make the article "History" the best possible and to write its shorter version for "Poland". Corrections make a text different but I'm not sure if better.
[[User:Xx236|Xx236]] 12:00, 16 January 2006 (UTC)

== Pictures ==

Would it be possible to replace the pictures of Katowice with some nicer ones? The ones that are up now (all three of them!) really don't do the city any justice!
[[User:MD|MD]] 10:33, 17 January 2006 (UTC)
:There are more to chose from at [[Katowice]], and note relevant picture categories both here and on Commons. Be bold and chose the ones you like - or go make some new photos :).--[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]] <sup><font color="green">[[User_talk:Piotrus|Talk]]</font></sup> 16:19, 17 January 2006 (UTC)
I put up a picture of Torun and changed the picture of Katowice with the reflection in the window (!) for a nicer one of the Spodek but someone reverted that and posted the old ugly pictures again! :( Come on: if you really want to include pictures of Katowice, why not some nicer ones? -- [[User:MD|MD]] 12:16, 20 January 2006 (UTC)
: I agree, the Spodek picture is much better. The one with reflection is pretty bad. [[User:Poszwa|Poszwa]] 17:09, 20 January 2006 (UTC)

On a related sidenote, [[Portal:Poland/New_article_announcements#Images]] contains info on some Poland-related images which will soon be deleted, becaue uplodars didn't use image copyright tags or didn't link the images from any articles.--[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]] <sup><font color="green">[[User_talk:Piotrus|Talk]]</font></sup> 00:12, 21 January 2006 (UTC)

This picture situation is really getting out of hand. Is there any way to stop this nonsense, agree on a series of HIGH QUALITY NICE PICTURES and prevent users like the one that keeps putting up the picture with the reflection from sabotaging our article? -- [[User:MD|MD]] 13:22, 21 January 2006 (UTC)

I'm a bit confused with the picture of the Third Reich flag put as a Polish flag... Is it intended or just vandalism? --[[User:Programming Hamster|Programming Hamster]] 18:56, 13 March 2006 (UTC)

Apparently something has to be done about [[User:Gagabrain|Gagabrain]] because he put that 3rd reich flag here twice (just checked a few earlier revisions) - [[User:Programming Hamster|Programming Hamster]] 18:13, 14 March 2006 (UTC)

==Katowice photos==

Any idea on how to handle these pictures ? This is not a picture gallery. The photos should be representative for the country. I don't think we need any photo from Katowice in this article, and definitely not 3 of them. Also it would be good to pay attention to the quality of the photos. --<sub>[[User:Lysy|Lysy]]</sub><sup>[[User talk:Lysy|talk]]</sup> 19:09, 20 January 2006 (UTC)
:I'd like to see one photo of Katowice - it's one of the major cities... and I was born there :) A nice picture of [[Spodek]] would probably be the best choice. Everything else should go to commons (remeber to add appopriate Category, like Category:Katowice, to the image, so it's not forgotten!).--[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]] <sup><font color="green">[[User_talk:Piotrus|Talk]]</font></sup> 23:30, 20 January 2006 (UTC)
::But photo at teh begining desribed as "Highway DTS Katowice", was changed by A2 Higway photo which is IMHO better (not ideal, and waiting for succesor) as "highway". Then look at editions of LUCPOL and SZPANER (I suspect that this is this same user). LUCPOL is also known on pl:wiki for "actions" that could be called "Katowice or death!". I agree that we need here one good photo of Katowice. :) [[User:Radomil|Radomil]] <small>[[User talk:Radomil|talk]]</small> 23:44, 20 January 2006 (UTC)

I have nothing against Katowice but I'm not quite sure if we need a photo of every major Polish city here. First let's think how many and what kind of pictures do we want to illustrate the article. I think something like 20 images would be fine for now, including maps, drawings etc. That would leave us more or less 15 photos. What should there be ? Sure some major cities both historic sights and modern centres, possibly some city landscape pictures featuring landmarks rather than focusing on individual objects. Then some countryside pictures, different landscapes, mountains, seaside, lakes, forests. A typical village architecture. Do not foget about the nature, which is one of the major assets of Poland. Do you agree ? Any ideas ? --<sub>[[User:Lysy|Lysy]]</sub><sup>[[User talk:Lysy|talk]]</sup> 13:18, 21 January 2006 (UTC)

I think if there is no agreement which picture of Katowice to choose, I'd prefer having none. I think Spodek is acceptable but is not particularly nice and the blue one with the reflection is horrible. [[User:Poszwa|Poszwa]] 19:27, 21 January 2006 (UTC)

The infamous pictures are back again!! Is there a way of blocking the IP of the person responsible for this vandalism?! --[[User:MD|MD]] 14:06, 22 January 2006 (UTC)
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Dobra. Słuchajcie. Obserwując ostatnio artykuł o Polsce można wywnioskować tylko jedno. Najpierw było mało zdjęć. Później dołożone zostały 3 zdjęcia Katowic: jedno w kategorii o miastach (gdzie są zdjęcia rynku największych miast) i pozostałe 2 zdjęcia z wieżowcami w kategorii o ekonomii (obok zdjęć wieżowców w Warszawie). Później się nagle wszyscy obudzili i zaczeli tkać tam swoje zdjęcia '''kasując poprzednie'''!!! Trzeba pójść na ugodę. Sprawa jest następująca. Zdjęcie rynku w Katowicach może zostać tak jak inne zdjęcia rynku innych największych polskich miast. Jeśli chodzi o dział ekonomia to powinien znaleźć się tak zdjęcie Spodka. Te drugie zdjęcie Katowic (wieżowce nocą) można wycofać z artykułu (jeśli chcecie). I teraz druga sprawa. Czy warto zostawiać zdjęcia jakiś wioch? Przecież to wstyd dla Polski. Polska będzie się kojarzyła z wioskami, a nie z cywilizowaną Europą. Zastanówcie się nad tym. I jeszcze dajcie tylko zdjęcie bociana... do artykułu o Polsce. Hehehe. Pozdrawiam --[[User:LUCPOL|LUCPOL]] 13:21, 22 January 2006 (UTC)

#Use English. This is English language wikipedia, not Polish, and most of users do not udnerstand our language
#Stop using sock-puppets to avoid 3RR violation
#Give your propositins of photos bleow
:[[User:Radomil|Radomil]] <small>[[User talk:Radomil|talk]]</small> 22:00, 22 January 2006 (UTC)
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:Na PL.Wiki nieraz teksty po rusku idą, a tu narzekają na Polski. Hehehe

::Use English on talk pages - that's important. That said, I don't see what's the fuss about L/S actions is about, and some who call it vandalism seem to behaving pretty uncivil. I do think that 1 photo of Katowice (rynek to fit the series, as LUCPOL noted) is in order. To answer Lysy - my rule of thumb is that a picture can be added to the article as long as therere is one picture per line and the lenght of the 'picture' block is no longer then the text - so yes, we should hopefuly have a pic of every major Polish town, and some other things. Spodek is nice, but I don't see it's relevance to economy. If anything, it should have some factory or something more 'economic'. Finally, as for [http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Poland&curid=22936&diff=36280576&oldid=36278892 'village' addition], see [[Wikipedia_talk:Polish_Wikipedians%27_notice_board#Problematic_user|my comment here]].--[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]] <sup><font color="green">[[User_talk:Piotrus|Talk]]</font></sup> 01:41, 23 January 2006 (UTC)

Well, I didn't call him "a troll", I only wanted to take greater attention on him from our Polish sub-community. One user that push his POV too hard, using for this purpose sock-puppets can destroy this delicate balance between different POV on Cetral Europe related articles. As for length of "picture block" - it's proportions with text depends on display resolution of Your monitor... [[User:Radomil|Radomil]] <small>[[User talk:Radomil|talk]]</small> 23:35, 23 January 2006 (UTC)

==List of Photos==
So let's try to make list of those 15 photos: [[User:Radomil|Radomil]] <small>[[User talk:Radomil|talk]]</small> 19:59, 21 January 2006 (UTC)

#Warsaw old town (as rebuilt from ruins [[Image:Warsaw_-_Royal_Castle_Square.jpg|30px|]])
#Warsaw modern city centre (something like [[Image:Wawka2.jpg|30px|]], but maybe better)
#Cracow (old town or the castle, or both, like here: [[Image:Krakau05.jpg|30px|]] but better quality and license)
#Poznań (town hall) [[Image:Ratusz Poznan RB1.jpg|25px|]] or [[Image:Ratusz Poznań Woźna.jpg|25px|]]
#Wrocław (town hall [[Image:Breslau-rathaus.jpg|30px]] or Ostrów Tumski)
#Katowice (or other town of GOP) or Łódź ?
#Gdańsk (the crane, Neptune fountain or the cathedral ?)
#Village1 (maybe Mazowsze architecture or landscape, or typical Polish manor house ?)
#Village2 (maybe Podhale or Beskidy architecture ?) <small>or maybe Biskupin? [[Image:Biskupin.jpg|30px|]] [[User:Radomil|Radomil]] <small>[[User talk:Radomil|talk]]</small> 21:29, 21 January 2006 (UTC)</small>
#:it could be difficult to get a good picture of Biskupin, that would not look like a cheap reconstruction. --<sub>[[User:Lysy|Lysy]]</sub><sup>[[User talk:Lysy|talk]]</sup> 22:27, 21 January 2006 (UTC)
#Small town (e.g. Lanckorona [[Image:Lanckoronaa.jpg|30px|]], Kazimierz [[Image:Poland KazimierzDolny.jpg|30px|]] ?)
#Baltic shore (Słowiński [[Image:Slowinski National Park.jpg|30px]] or [[Image:SlowinNP-duny3.jpg|30px]] or Woliński National Park?)
#Lake districts (Masuria or other)
#Plains (Masovia, Southern Greater Poland, Lower Silesia, maybe with view on Warta [[Image:Wartakw.jpg|25px|]], Odra or Vistula ?)
#Mountains (Tatra ?, there are many photos of those mountains)
#Nature (White Stork [[Image:White Stork (Ciconia ciconia).jpg|30px|]], horses, wisent [[Image:Wisent.jpg|30px|]], Puszcza Białowieska ?)
#A castle (Ogrodzieniec [[Image:Ogrodzieniec.jpg|30px]], Malbork [[Image:Marienburg 2004.jpg|30px|]], Książ, Nowy Wiśnicz ?)
#:A couple of things to consider:
#:*Polish or foreign (e.g. Teutonic) ?
#:*original/rebuilt/ruins ?
#:*medieval ?
#:Maybe other element of material culture? [[Image:Olobokfr.jpg|25px]] or something like that?

===Discussion===
*Do we allow "portrait" form, or "landscape" only ? --<sub>[[User:Lysy|Lysy]]</sub><sup>[[User talk:Lysy|talk]]</sup> 21:52, 21 January 2006 (UTC)
*quality ?
*license ?
*maybe try to make them into featured pics, first ?

I'd suggest adding [[Łódź]] pic, if we want to have most major cities covered. Kraków is the most famous Polish city abroad, probably as famous as Warsaw, so I'd suggest 2 pics of it (especially if we want to pics of Wawa). In the case of Wawa, I'd suggest one of the pics to show the 'modern' city - the curren selection of castle+old town would be more suitable for Cracow, not our capital. Finally, on a related note: it's nice to see some activity here, and photos contribs are always welcome - please remember to use image copyright tags and put the image into [[:Category:Images of Poland]] (or Category:Poland on commons), or into more specific city/region related subcategories.--[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]] <sup><font color="green">[[User_talk:Piotrus|Talk]]</font></sup> 01:45, 23 January 2006 (UTC)

:Łódź is of course very important but not many pictureque (similarly to Katowice). What would be the representative picture of Łódź ? Piotrkowska ? On a photo it looks just like a street, not very intereting. Two pics for Warsaw would be justified if they are very different, therefore I suggested one of the old town and one of the modern centre. As for Cracow, I know it is an important city, but what different pictures again ? I guess both would be of the old town ? I think they should be rather exposing some diversity, therefore I suggested only one. --<sub>[[User:Lysy|Lysy]]</sub><sup>[[User talk:Lysy|talk]]</sup> 04:27, 23 January 2006 (UTC)
::I don't know about Łódź, but I am sure we can find something nice. Kraków gives us lots of choice - I'd suggest Rynek/Sukiennice, and Wawel. Wieliczka and Oświęcim are popular turist atractions that we may consider as well.--[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]] <sup><font color="green">[[User_talk:Piotrus|Talk]]</font></sup> 05:58, 23 January 2006 (UTC)
:::I'm not sure about Oświęcim etc. This is not supposed to be a tourist guide, but a selection of pictures giving an impression of multiple aspects of the country. Ideally, the pictures should be not only good technically, but interesting, "eye-catching" and typical or characteristic for the country. I think that photos of interiors are appropriate for individual articles but not for this one, which is obviously a general one. Therefore it would be difficult to have a decent picture of Wieliczka. As for Oświęcim, hmm, is this a typical picture of Poland or what ? As for Wawel and Rynek, they are not very different thematically, in that they both would both be pictures of historic buildings. Maybe, if we have really good and appalling pictures of both ... I don't know. --<sub>[[User:Lysy|Lysy]]</sub><sup>[[User talk:Lysy|talk]]</sup> 06:50, 23 January 2006 (UTC)

:As for Łódź, any picture of any palace at Piotrkowska would do. [[:Image:2005-09 Łódź (1).jpg|Poznański's]] [[:Image:Palac Poznanskiego.JPG|palace]] (or [[:Image:Palac Poznanskiego 1.jpg|here]], with a rag of factory visible), [[:Image:UM Lodz.jpg|Heinz's]], [[:Image:Schweikert Palace.jpg|Schweikert's]], [[:Image:Jarisch Palace.jpg|Jarisch']] or the [[:Image:Palac Poznanskiego AM.jpg|small Poznański's]] perhaps? Alternatively we could add some pretty industrial pic as it is also quite nice. [[:Image:Grohman Sheibler factory.jpg|Grohman's factory]] comes to mind... [[User:Halibutt|Halibu]][[User talk:Halibutt|tt]] 23:02, 23 January 2006 (UTC)

Well, IMO GOP it is important part of Poland (mayby not from Tourstiv POV, but it is). Perhaps e should put Łódź picture in place of one of "Village photos"? [[User:Radomil|Radomil]] <small>[[User talk:Radomil|talk]]</small> 23:38, 23 January 2006 (UTC)

== need ==

time line
:There already is a [[Timeline of Polish history]].--[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]] <sup><font color="green">[[User_talk:Piotrus|Talk]]</font></sup> 22:53, 23 January 2006 (UTC)
There should be more pictures on this page...

== In total, there are around 91,000 scientists in Poland today. ==

I believe that the Polish word "uczony" cannot be translated as "scientist", because "science" means "nauki scisłe".
[[User:Xx236|Xx236]] 11:27, 21 February 2006 (UTC)
:What about social scientists then?--[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]] <sup><font color="green">[[User_talk:Piotrus|Talk]]</font></sup> 23:27, 1 March 2006 (UTC)

==A list of Poles==

How about a list of Polish Americans, I would like to include my Wife [[User:Randazzo56|randazzo56]]2-28-06

:Well, is your wife famous? We can't add ''all'' Polish-Americans, there are probably several million.[[User:Cameron Nedland|Cameron Nedland]] 18:23, 27 September 2006 (UTC)

== Large credits? ==

"and the government had large credits" - does it sound OK? I mean, it's probably supposed to mean that the Gierek's government took <b>large loans</b> (which they did). "Credit" is ambiguous IMHO but I'd rather some native speaker spoke out. [[User:Zbihniew|Zbihniew]] 23:01, 1 March 2006 (UTC)
:Debts, perhaps, will be the best solution?--[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]] <sup><font color="green">[[User_talk:Piotrus|Talk]]</font></sup> 23:27, 1 March 2006 (UTC)
why it is not mentioned that Reymont has got Nobel prize? <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/{{{IP|{{{User|89.98.19.137}}}}}}|{{{IP|{{{User|89.98.19.137}}}}}}]] ([[User talk:{{{IP|{{{User|89.98.19.137}}}}}}|talk]]) {{{Time|20:52, 14 March 2007}}}</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP -->
:It may not have been added by other people. Feel free to add it if it can be confirmed. [[User:Nol888|<font color="red">N</font><font color="green">o</font><font color="blue">l</font><font color="orange">888</font>]]<sub>([[User_talk:Nol888|<font color="teal">Talk</font>]])</sub><sup>([[Wikipedia:Editor review/Nol888_2|Review me please]])</sup> 00:56, 15 March 2007 (UTC)

== Radio Maryja/Corrupt Church ==

Reported by the BBC, the church has abused their power. Churches are constantly being built, and priest buy luxury cars, while Poland suffers extreme poverty. THe Government has recently been criticized by the E.U. for their extremist religious views.
:Certainly [[Radio Maryja]] deserves its own article. Whether it's important enough to be linked from this article, though, I am not sure. Btw, if BBC reported something, could you give us the link?--[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]] <sup><font color="green">[[User_talk:Piotrus|Talk]]</font></sup> 01:42, 7 March 2006 (UTC)


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Separation of Church and state

The Polish government is a fundamentally catholic. The church has large say in affairs within the nation. The government forces children from as early as kindergarten (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/45622.stm) (as signed with the Vatican) to have Christian classes (in Public, state funded schools). But sectarianism is not the only issue.
:Clarification - it is true that "religion" (in fact Christian clases) is thought in public schools but is not mendatory. One can opt-out from it. There is no "formal" pressure to attend such clases but for sure there may be "social" pressure to attend. (I did not have any citations if such "social" pressure is present or how widespread it is but personally I did not experienced such pressure but for me it was 4 last years of primary school and whole secondary school and I live in large city which may be significant factor ...). [[User:83.25.80.206|83.25.80.206]] 22:58, 12 March 2006 (UTC)


Corrupt Church

The Polish church has been many time criticized corruption (although some can be jailed for this, as under polish law a person who criticizes the government can be jailed, and as the Polish church holds a tight grip on government, a person who criticizes the church may be jailed). Many Poles probably know a lot of the corruption allegations. One is that the church does not have to pay VAT (taxes). In the early 90s the church would purchase large trucks of beer, and other suppliers for large events and then sell them to make large profits. The church has also been criticized for its extravagance. In a nation were the unemployment/poverty I very large, priest/bishops buy themselves expensive cars, build many church, and build their living quarters with supplies such as marble. The church has also been involved with many enterprises and profiting from the no tax. (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/363004.stm).

:1) there is no law that sends to jail for cricicizing goverment, but there is controversial law that make defamation of certain people (incuding head of the state and heads of foreign states !!!) general offence pursued by public presecutor but it is rearly used and AFAIK no one have actually gone to jail because of it. 2) - AFAIK there is no law sentensing for jail for criticizing church. Mayby you are mentioning "offence against religious feelings" (this is direct translation of "obraza uczuc religijnych") law? The most notably case that i know (and basicaly only case) when it was used was in artist Dorota Nieznalska case - as an "artistic instalation" she put photo of man's penis on cross ... She was convicted for (i think ...) 2 years in probation (so she did not go to jail + there is appeal going on) 3) - the "thigh grip" you are talking about '''if one can say is real''' came from two sources - concordad (agreement between Poland and Vatican state) giving church relatively big priviliges (but still whitin european standards IMHO) and ''soft'' power over politicians (on the left wing - no one oppose church not to offend voters and on the right wing people actually support view of church and church hierarchy is natural political allay and role model -> but again it is not that simple as for example PiS and LPR follow o. Rydzyk not bp. Pieronek. [[User:83.25.80.206|83.25.80.206]] 22:58, 12 March 2006 (UTC)

There is much speculation that the Polish church is trying to become a political power, rather than a religious institution.

:I do not know if one can say about church as a whole but some part of it have such ambitions (like o. Rydzyk) [[User:83.25.80.206|83.25.80.206]] 22:58, 12 March 2006 (UTC)


Conservatism

In 2000, (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/692586.stm) the polish parliament wanted to implement a bill that banned all pornography (even soft core), with penalties of jail term up to two years (which would be the toughest law in Europe). Kwasniewski, President at the time, did not ratify it.

The church is highly vocal on issues such as abortion, same-sex marriage. They have often persuaded the public to vote against candidates that support these issues (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/3631707.stm). The church has criticized the EU for not allowing “God” to be mentioned in the constitution, having un-Christian morals, and not allowing the church to play a larger role in European affairs.

Abortion laws in Poland are the strictest of any nation in Poland. There has been a recent case where a women, that has three children already, would go blind if the abortion is not allowed. The government has not allowed her to go ahead with the abortion. This has sparked much criticism in the EU. The women receives state welfare, and is disabled as well. She would not be capable of supporting the next child as she is single (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4691192.stm).

The nation has seen a rise in radicalism as well (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/1565094.stm), both in government and in the public. With the party “league of Christian families”, there have been many “skin head” groups that have risen.
:Please do remember that there were always conservative (+ some rasist and xenophobes) people in Poland. For some time their voice was completely unrepresented and now is IMHO is overrepresented. After some time (probably) everything will go back to normal (after new elections?). Please do remember that current economic situation (uneployment and transitions of the last 16 years) also fuels conservative attitude but you are right that it seems that church fits into the trend of rise of the conservatism [[User:83.25.80.206|83.25.80.206]] 22:58, 12 March 2006 (UTC)



First of all, the goverment is not responsible for everything that is happening in Poland.
Nor is the Church. (Yes, there are some municipal authorities, NGOs, political parties, pressure groups, media, trade unions, and even individuals that exist in Poland).

Second, The Church is not a monolith. There are some priests that support Radio Maryja, but many other oppose it (including the primat and many bishops). You can be a catholic and disagree with RM policies.

There is a no "rise in skinhead groups". This is plain rubbish.
The "Ligue of Polish Families" (which - BTW - is nationalistic, but quite moderately) support in the poles is currently at about 2 or 3%.

The only person sentenced for "offending religious feelings" was Dorota Nieznalska. She was sentenced to 6 months of community work (under appeal).
The only person sentenced fot "offending a foreign head of state" was [[Jerzy Urban]]. He was sentenced to pay a fine.

The Church does have some tax privileges - as it does in many other states - including the US.

Some priests in the 1990s (not "The Church") have in fact discouraged their congregations of voting for certain candidates . But the effect was completly the opposite. So they ceased doing so.

The abortion laws in Poland are not "the strictest" that you can imagine. In the case of Alicja Tysiac (the woman that was supposed to go blind unless she had an abortion - actually it did not happened) it was her doctor (not "the goverment") that had not allowed an abortion.

P.S.
The above quotations from the BBC are "a little" outdated. Furthermore, BBC is vary poorly informed about polish politics. --[[User:Barry Kent|Barry Kent]] 00:00, 21 April 2006 (UTC)


Radio Maryja

This radio station (which has a TV program as well) has come across much critics, even sometimes from the catholic church. It is blamed for fueling anti-Semitism, and xenophobic anger (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/2758795.stm). The station has approximately 6 million listeners in Poland alone. -- GPRIEST --[[User:Gpriest|Gpriest]] 14:56, 10 March 2006 (UTC)

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== [[Area of Poland]] ==

'''The correct territory of Poland: '''322575 km²'''
<br>include:
*land area (including inland waters: rivers and lakes) – 311889 km²
*territorial sea (internal sea watres) – 8682 km²

The total area of the country according to the administrative division amounts to 312683 km² and includes a land area (including inland waters) of 311889 km² as well as a part of internal sea waters — 794 km², i.e.: Wisła Bay, including ports, Szczecin Bay, including: Lake Nowowarpieńskie, Lake Wicko Wielkie, Kamieński Bay and ports as well as Gulf of
Gdańsk ports and border ports.<br>
''Source'': [http://www.stat.gov.pl/opracowania_zbiorcze/maly_rocznik_stat/2006/10_mrs2006.pdf CONCISE STATISTICAL YEARBOOK OF POLAND 2006]
<br>[[User:Aotearoa from Poland|Aotearoa from Poland]] 22:01, 20 March 2006 (UTC)

:According to Encyclopedia Encarta 2006 (and all earlier versions), the total land area of Poland is 312,684 sq km (120,728 sq mi). I think that Encarta is very good in gathering correct data and it is very important to use an internationally verifiable source. <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/207.112.65.82|207.112.65.82]] ([[User talk:207.112.65.82|talk]]) 16:05, 26 November 2006 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP -->

::According to the Central Statistical Office of Poland [http://www.stat.gov.pl/opracowania_zbiorcze/powiaty/tablice.pdf] the total land area of Poland is 312685 km². This is the most reliable source.--[[User:Thomaspca|Thomaspca]] 02:11, 27 November 2006 (UTC)

::I added the reference [http://www.stat.gov.pl/opracowania_zbiorcze/powiaty/tablice.pdf] to the intro section. --[[User:Thomaspca|Thomaspca]] 17:02, 29 November 2006 (UTC)

*The area of Poland is 312,685 km². There is no any Polish Law that states otherwise. This is factual data and no law can change it. According to the Central Statistical Office in Poland (See References) the total land are of Poland is 312,685 km². The text in bold below is copied directly from [http://www.stat.gov.pl/opracowania_zbiorcze/maly_rocznik_stat/2005/01_war_nat_i_och_sro.pdf CONCISE STATISTICAL YEARBOOK OF POLAND 2005 - PAGE 25] ''(Polish)'': '''"Powierzchnia ogólna kraju przyjęta według podziału administracyjnego wynosi 312685 km² i obejmuje obszar lądowy (łącznie z wodami śródlądowymi) - 311904 km² oraz część morskich wód wewnętrznych - 781 km²"'''. So, the area including all inland waters (311904 km²/land/rivers/lakes + 781 km²/internal-sea-waters) is '''312685 km²''' but not 322577 km²!
:*Don't change information if you havn't got correct sources. If you look on Polish Wikipedia site [[pl:Polska]], or on CONCISE STATISTICAL YEARBOOK OF POLAND 2006 publised by Central Statistical Office, page 25 (see website: [http://www.stat.gov.pl/opracowania_zbiorcze/maly_rocznik_stat/2006/10_mrs2006.pdf] - fool yearbook in PDF) you can find that area of Poland is 322,575 km² [[User:Aotearoa from Poland|Aotearoa from Poland]] 19:31, 10 December 2006 (UTC)

*'''I see that [[User:Aotearoa]] / [[User talk:Aotearoa from Poland]] / [[User:Aotearoa from Poland]] continues to vandalize the English version of the introduction section of POLAND. The changes that he makes do not make any sense, they confuse people, and they do not look good! I redesigned the Introduction part and the Culture section of [[Poland|POLAND]] and now they still look good but I am not sure for how long the sections will stay that way. Unfortunately, due to the constant vandalism by [[User:Aotearoa from Poland]] and others, I decided that all of the improvements are not worth my valuable time that is why I wont do them anymore!''' --[[User:Thomaspca|Thomaspca]] 19:45, 11 December 2006 (UTC)
*:So, in my opinion, edition by [[User:Thomaspca|Thomaspca]] should be classified as vandalization. I have given actual and official sources in support my editions. [[User:Thomaspca|Thomaspca]] has reverted my edition without any logical substantiations – he has changed because he “know better”. I see that [[User:Thomaspca|Thomaspca]] is new user, and maybe he don’t know rules of Wikipedia. [[User:Aotearoa from Poland|Aotearoa from Poland]] 05:22, 12 December 2006 (UTC)

According to [http://www.britannica.com/nations/Poland Encyclopedia Britannica] the total area of Polnad is 312,685 [[sq km]] => Link: [http://www.britannica.com/nations/Poland]

=== Stop Changing the Land Area of POLAND ===

According to [http://www.britannica.com/nations/Poland Encyclopedia Britannica] the total area of Polnad is 312,685 [[sq km]] => Link: [http://www.britannica.com/nations/Poland]

I agree with someone who posted the area of 312685 sq km earlier today. I went to see both sources mentioned by you [[User:Aotearoa]] and [[User talk:Aotearoa from Poland]] and [[User:Aotearoa from Poland]] as well as the TABLICE by Central Statistical Office of Poland (see references; Page 1)) and I have to conclude that we should consider the land are of Poland as 312685 sq km! Did you ever see any country's area posted in any media that would include external sea or ocean area! Please take a look around the internet and you will never see such things posted anywhere! Even though the area of Poland including the external sea is 322575 sq km, the land area including inland sea area in only 312685 sq km and this number should be posted '''to not confuse other users'''! Please come to [[Talk:Poland]] section to discuss this further. Once again, '''please do not confuse readers''' with your version of information (322575 sq km). The Central Statistical Office posted the total land area of POLAND on many of their documents as 312685 sq km. So, please stop damaging my work! Do not change the land area with your info! The area posted now, 312685 sq km, is the correct total land area referenced here by 3 sources and there are many more sources to support this fact out there! Thanks! --[[User:Thomaspca|Thomaspca]] 20:06, 10 December 2006 (UTC)
: 322575 sq km is area of territory of Poland - land area (311 889 sq km) + internal waters (area of Gulf of Gdańsk, Gulf of Szczeciń and some harbours - 2004 sq km) + territorial sea (8682 sq km). 312683 sq km is administrative area of Poland (area of administrative divisions) - land area (311 889 sq km) + '''part of internal waters''' (794 sq km). So, if you need corret area of Poland, you must know witch are you want. If you want land area of Poland (corresponding to others country's area) - the correct value is 311889 sq km. But if you want area of land and internal waters - value is 313893 sq km. Administrative area (312683 sq km) is only statistic area and don't correpond with ares of others countries sown in Wikipedia. In remark: there are new values of area of land and area of internal waters in new official ststistic yearbook (by Central Statistical Office) - area was changed after new surveys by Head Office of Geodesy and Cartography. [[User:Aotearoa from Poland|Aotearoa from Poland]] 05:57, 11 December 2006 (UTC)

PAX. Aotearoa is definitely right - we must know what we want. And what is enwiki standard for this? ''Total areas are included, covering land and inland water bodies (lakes, reservoirs, rivers). Marine internal waters, territorial waters and Exclusive Economic Zones are not included''. See [[List of countries and outlying territories by total area]], the areas are (and should be kept) consistent with this article. So the correct value here is 311889+794='''312683'''. We may add info about teritorial waters somewhere with an explicit explanation, but it is evident that the "oficial area" should be set to 312683. --[[User:Beaumont|Beaumont]] [[User_Talk:Beaumont|<small><span style="color:#118811">(@)</span></small>]] 12:01, 12 December 2006 (UTC)

BTW, the 312685 standard has been accepted in other ecyclopedias: Britannica [http://www.britannica.com/nations/Poland] or Polish PWN [http://encyklopedia.pwn.pl/haslo.php?id=4169123] (rounded). --[[User:Beaumont|Beaumont]] [[User_Talk:Beaumont|<small><span style="color:#118811">(@)</span></small>]] 12:35, 12 December 2006 (UTC)

:You wrote that “Total areas are included, covering land and inland water bodies (lakes, reservoirs, rivers). Marine internal waters, territorial waters and Exclusive Economic Zones are not included”. But administrative area of Poland include same of marine internal waters (39,6% of Polish internal waters (794 km²), i.e. Zalew Szczeciński and Zalew Wiślany; total area of Polish internal waters is 2004 km²). In my opinion this is a problem, because administrative [[area of Poland]] (312 685 km²) doesn’t correspond with areas of other countries (i.e. only land areas). And administrative area of Poland isn’t “official area” – it is just statistic area of Polish communes (see at Polish Wikipedia [[pl:Powierzchnia Polski]]). [[User:Aotearoa from Poland|Aotearoa from Poland]] 17:38, 12 December 2006 (UTC)

No, this is not ''just a statistical number''. There are two issues to consider.
*The point is that your source defines explicitely ''the coast line''. And according to this some waters are inland waters. This should be taken into account (and in the source you have detailed explanation what kind of waters is taken into accout: lakes, ports, rivers are a great part of it). Then you arrive at the number I have indicated.
*The problem is that we deal with a [[primary source]], which is not recommended. Actually, ''primary materials typically require interpretation, interpolation, extrapolation, or corroboration, each of which usually constitutes original research'' (see [[WP:RS]]). IMHO, you isert your OR - the way you understand the primary source. If I objected on the same basis, this would be no better. But we are supposed to use [[secondary sources]] or [[tertiary sources]]. Another relevant quotation from [[WP:RS]]: ''Tertiary sources can be used for names, spellings, locations, dates and dimensions''. And virtually all secondary and tertiary sources give '''312685''', some links above (It is reasonable to correct it slightly according to the newest stat. survey). Now, in my version everything is consistent - the natural interpretaion of the primary source and what we see in the sencondary/teritiary sources.
I hope this clearly justifies the number (and some corrections that I make to the article). Best regards, --[[User:Beaumont|Beaumont]] [[User_Talk:Beaumont|<small><span style="color:#118811">(@)</span></small>]] 13:05, 13 December 2006 (UTC)

**'''I completely agree with Beaumont and Thomaspca! Unfortunately, Aotearoa reads too much into his sources, which also state that the total area of Poland including internal waters is 312685 sq km. As Beaumont said (and I completely agree), there are many other sources that cite the area of Poland as 312685 sq km! Why Wikipedia should be differrent from other well known sources? This will make users feel as there are many errors at Wiki! I vote for the area of Poland as 312685 sq km!'''

According to [http://www.britannica.com/nations/Poland Encyclopedia Britannica] the total area of Polnad is 312,685 [[sq km]] => Link: [http://www.britannica.com/nations/Poland]



It looks like this can of worms has been reopened, just read that Poland's area will now expand as a result of the Czech Republic returning some land because of border adjustment. [http://www.radio.cz/en/article/89506] Good luck to anybody attempting to figure out what the area is now. [[User:JRWalko|JRWalko]] 00:42, 28 March 2007 (UTC)

== Economy ==
Is not the agricultural sector just 10% of the economy (and thus a problem)? This should be noted in the sentence about agriculture. Also, the figures from this article might be useful: http://www.ce-review.org/01/19/cave19.html --[[User:Vegalabs|Vegalabs]] 02:14, 18 April 2006 (UTC)

==Semi-protection==
Due to continual vandalization, effective December 7, 2007, "[[Poland]]" has been granted semi-protection for 1 month. Also, a user has been blocked. [[User:Nihil novi|Nihil novi]] ([[User talk:Nihil novi|talk]]) 15:38, 7 December 2007 (UTC)

== Template:Unit sqkm ==

I just wanted to let everyone know that there exists a conversion template: [[Template:Unit sqkm]] for all those ugly-looking '''''X km² (Y sq mi)''''' mentions that everyone seems to be so fond of. Here's the basic usage:
<nowiki>{{unit sqkm|SQUARE KILOMETERS|PRECISION}}</nowiki>
For example: '''<nowiki>{{unit sqkm|400|2}}</nowiki>''' produces:
{{unit sqkm|400|2}}
You can also have it link to [[square kilometre]] and [[square mile]]; '''<nowiki>{{unit sqkm|4000|0|lk=on}}</nowiki>''' produces:
{{unit sqkm|4000|0|lk=on}}
See also: '''[[Template:Unit m]]''' (for meter <=> foot)
→ '''''[[User:H3xx|{{color|orangered|ɧ}}{{color|darkorange|ʒ}}{{color|orange|<small>Ж</small>χ}}]] <small>([[User talk:H3xx|{{color|darkred|ГДĽК}}]] • [[Special:Contributions/H3xx|{{color|darkred|КОИГЯІВ}}]])</small>''''' 08:01, 21 December 2007 (UTC)

== Geography ==
''Poland’s territory extends across the ocean and five geographical regions.''

This has been in for days and I can't fix it. If you do semi-protection, you must proof read the whole thing.

== Some statistics office's categorization ==

I just came across this article by accident, but I think the remark about some statistics office considering Poland to be part of Eastern Europe - it's in the very first intro sentence - makes this sentence awkward to read. Plus it does not seem relevant at all. Even if that statistics offfice happens to be part of the UN, it does not give any indication that it's categorization is any more relevant or binding than the code number (616) it assigns to Poland. I wanted to delete the remark straight away, but then I read the comment that asked me to discuss the matter first. [[User:Yaan|Yaan]] ([[User talk:Yaan|talk]]) 12:07, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


== GDP (PPP) per capita is 20 000 USD? SINCE WHEN? ==

According to CIA Factbook and IMF Poland has never reached 20 000 per capita GDP (PPP). I wonder how did it make up from 16 700 to 20 080? Strange a bit. <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/78.61.120.154|78.61.120.154]] ([[User talk:78.61.120.154|talk]]) 11:59, 12 January 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

== Percentage of Poles ==

I grouped the "Demographics" and "Ethnicity and Religion" sections together, since it made little sense for them to be apart, and reworded some sentences in them. But I did not know what to do with the two conflicting statistics on the percentage of ethnic Polish people in Poland - one sentence claims that it is 96.74%, while another claims that it is 99.3%. I presume these come from separate censuses, but it's not clear which one is the more current. Whichever one it is, that one should be retained and the other one deleted. [[User:Funnyhat|Funnyhat]] ([[User talk:Funnyhat|talk]]) 07:24, 22 January 2008 (UTC)

=="baptized"==
I know this will get me in trouble with some of our numerous Polish friends, but in English it sounds very odd to say "the first Polish state was baptized in 966." In English, 'to baptize' ''always'' refers to an individual human being, never to a country. In English, it sounds almost comical — as if an entire country could step up to the baptismal font or down into the river.

Okay, so there's an English figure of speech, "baptism of fire," referring to an entity's first exposure to action — such a a military unit's first experience with combat. That doesn't have any bearing on the observation above.

Generally historical articles say something like, "XXX was first mentioned in the historical record in ...," or "The origin of XXX is thought to date from ...."

[[User:Sca|Sca]] ([[User talk:Sca|talk]]) 20:47, 1 February 2008 (UTC)

:I've had a go at rephrasing the offending sentence. --[[User:Kotniski|Kotniski]] ([[User talk:Kotniski|talk]]) 21:26, 1 February 2008 (UTC)

::Yes, this reads much better in English. But it still strikes me as odd to begin the history of the country/nation with the first ruler to be baptized. Was there a 'Poland' before that date? Who were the 'Polans'? Is this pre-Christian history too shrouded in early-medieval obscurity to explain it in a more linear fashion? I note that the article on German history begins with the pre-history of the Germanic tribes. The Lithuania history article starts with the first mention of said country/duchy in recorded history, centuries before its Christianization.

[[User:Sca|Sca]] ([[User talk:Sca|talk]]) 21:10, 4 February 2008 (UTC)

See also: [[baptism of Poland]] --<sub><span style="border:1px solid #228B22;padding:1px;">[[User:Piotrus|Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus]]|[[User_talk:Piotrus|<font style="color:#7CFC00;background:#006400;"> talk </font>]]</span></sub> 21:19, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
==Photos==

Photos are awful. Why nobody put here [[Krakow]], [[Gdansk]], [[Zamosc]], [[Torun]]... or [[Morskie Oko]] pictures? Wisents and white storks are strictly boring and symblise nothing. Compare it to i.e. [[Slovakia]] page. [[User:IlluminatiX|IlluminatiX]] ([[User talk:IlluminatiX|talk]]) 22:01, 18 February 2008 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 01:35, 13 December 2024


Lede has to change

[edit]

It's currently both too long (too many paragraphs) and too poor. This was a good proposition deleted without thorough discussion:

Poland (Polish: Polska [ˈpɔlska] ), officially the Republic of Poland,[a] is a country in Central Europe. It extends from the Baltic Sea in the north to the Sudetes and Carpathian Mountains in the south, while its longest river is the Vistula. Poland has a temperate transitional climate and is the fifth-most populous member state of the European Union, with its sixteen voivodeships having a total population of over 38 million and covering a combined area of 312,696 km2 (120,733 sq mi).[1][2] It is bordered by Lithuania and Russia to the northeast,[b] Belarus and Ukraine to the east, Slovakia and the Czech Republic to the south, and Germany to the west. The nation's capital and largest metropolis is Warsaw. Other major cities include Kraków, Wrocław, Łódź, Poznań, and Gdańsk.

Prehistoric human activity on Polish soil dates to the Lower Paleolithic, with continuous settlement since the end of the Last Glacial Period. Culturally diverse throughout late antiquity, in the early medieval period the region became inhabited by the tribal Polans, who gave Poland its name. The process of establishing proper statehood, which began in 966, coincided with the conversion of a pagan ruler of the Polans to Christianity, under the auspices of the Roman Catholic Church. The Kingdom of Poland emerged in 1025, and in 1569 cemented its long-standing association with Lithuania, thus forming the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. At the time, the Commonwealth was one of the great powers of Europe, with a uniquely liberal political system which on 3 May 1791 adopted Europe's first modern constitution.

With the passing of the prosperous Polish Golden Age, the country was partitioned by neighbouring states at the end of the 18th century. Poland regained its independence in 1918 as the Second Polish Republic and successfully defended it in the Polish–Soviet War from 1919 to 1921. In September 1939, the invasion of Poland by Germany and the Soviet Union marked the beginning of World War II, which resulted in the Holocaust and millions of Polish casualties. As a member of the Eastern Bloc in the global Cold War, the Polish People's Republic was a founding signatory of the Warsaw Pact. Through the emergence and contributions of the Solidarity movement, the communist government was dissolved and Poland re-established itself as a democratic state in 1989.

Poland is a parliamentary republic, with its bicameral legislature comprising the Sejm and the Senate. It is a developed market and a high-income economy. Considered a middle power, Poland has the sixth-largest economy in the European Union by GDP (nominal) and the fifth-largest by GDP (PPP). It provides a very high standard of living, safety, and economic freedom, as well as free university education and a universal health care system. The country has 17 UNESCO World Heritage Sites, 15 of which are cultural. Poland is a founding member state of the United Nations, as well as a member of the World Trade Organization, OECD, NATO, and the European Union (including the Schengen Area).

References

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference GUS was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference BBC News 2023 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  • This lede is akin to ledes from other country pages. The current lede is bizarre—both too long and too poor at conveying information. And unlike ledes for other countries (Germany, France etc.)

FeldmarschallGneisenau (talk) 21:26, 14 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Anyone? FeldmarschallGneisenau (talk) 04:36, 21 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Btw I remembered the MoS recommends 4-paragraph ledes FeldmarschallGneisenau (talk) 04:40, 21 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I am not against either, but the 5 paragraph one is more on point with a distinguished separate geo paragraph and MoS is just a guideline. Unfortunately, this is not a GA article. Merangs (talk) 18:50, 22 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
No other country page does a "distinguished geo paragraph" though. The Germany page is Featured, we oughta take an example from it, shouldn't we? FeldmarschallGneisenau (talk) 04:28, 24 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Anyone? @Piotrus MoS recommends 4-paragraph ledes. I want this article to be Featured quality, like Germany. FeldmarschallGneisenau (talk) 22:54, 2 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@FeldmarschallGneisenau If nobody replies, be bold and change it as you see fit. I do not have the time & will do review things at the moment (things being, compare both leads word by word), but feel free to ping me if there is any specific element or elements (sentences, phrasing, etc.) that folks want to review. Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| reply here 03:39, 3 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Ps. I did have time to review the lead. I think this can be cut: "the Polish People's Republic was a founding signatory of the Warsaw Pact"; I think it is of trivial importance, and anyway, only USSR was the founding member that matters, every other country was a puppet state anyway. Instead, I'd suggest adding a few words about 19th century uprisings (January Uprising, November Uprising) which IMHO are much more relevant to the Polish history than the Warsaw Pact. Similar to the above, I have my doubts whether " Poland is a founding member state of the United Nations" is relevant - being a UN member is trivial, and being its founding member seems like trivia, IMHO. WTO and OECD are, I guess, symbol status in the international arena, and EU and NATO of course matter from geopolitical perspective, so they are fine. Final comment about the proposed lead: it should include word (and link) for 'Slavic' somewhere. Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| reply here 03:46, 3 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I think it's OK to mention it because the Warsaw Pact was signed in Warsaw... which is a fact of some significance. FeldmarschallGneisenau (talk) 04:37, 3 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Maybe that would be good for the Warsaw article, you can say Poland was a part of the pact. O.maximov (talk) 13:18, 29 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus is right, be bold. O.maximov (talk) 13:18, 29 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]
What are your suggestions? O.maximov (talk) 13:17, 29 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@O.maximov Feld... is now indef blocked. (Tip: enable seeing if a user is blocked in the preference settings by having them displayed as crossed out, together with making redirects green and disambigs orange :P). Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| reply here 10:54, 31 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for the tip. Good to know. O.maximov (talk) 11:22, 31 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Meellk: @Piotrus: - Instead of West Slavic in the lede can we utilise the term "Lechitic" as the previous is more generic/ethnic and the latter refers particularly to Poland and closely related cultures/language/tribes and how they stood out across the early medieval period. Of course, one does not exclude the other but Lechitic is more on point in terms of terminology. Merangs (talk) 21:50, 27 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
So in one instance (Polish-Soviet war) you prefer a more generic descriptor (emerged victorious in several wars yada yada). In this instance you prefer a more precise descriptor. It seems you're just hell-bent on reverting my edits, no matter if they were even inspired by me or by a much more experienced editor than either of us. I oppose, Lechitic is obscure to a general reader, whereas West Slavic is clear. Meellk (talk) 15:20, 28 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I support Piotrus's proposition for including the word Slavic somewhere in the lede, if that wasn't clear. Meellk (talk) 15:25, 28 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Is Poland a parliamentary republic or a semi-presidential one?

[edit]

Over on the talk page for List of countries by system of government, there was a debate going on about whether Poland was parliamentary or semi-presidential. Before, the consensus was that it was de jure parliamentary, but de facto semi-presidential. However, some people have argued that even de jure it is semi-presidential, and that ended up being the new consensus taken. For making things consistent and not confusing, I wanted to open up the discussion here too, and have people debate whether we should change it from parliamentary to semi-presidential. ICommandeth (talk) 09:02, 23 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Essentially, according to this source, the word "executive" is used explicitly to refer to the President's role, which fits in with the definition of a semi-presidential system, where the head of state is in charge of the executive and the head of government is in charge of the legislative branch. – GlowstoneUnknown (Talk) 12:07, 24 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
See also:
Semi-Presidential Systems: Dual Executive And Mixed Authority Patterns (Shugart, Matthew Søberg)
"Even if the president has no discretion in the forming of cabinets or the right to dissolve parliament, his or her constitutional authority can be regarded as 'quite considerable' in Duverger's sense if cabinet legislation approved in parliament can be blocked by the people's elected agent. Such powers are especially relevant if an extraordinary majority is required to override a veto, as in Mongolia, Poland, and Senegal. In these cases, while the government is fully accountable to parliament, it cannot legislate without taking the potentially different policy preferences of the president into account."
LVDP01 (talk) 12:26, 24 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I was under the impression that the presidential veto wasn't enshrined in the Polish constitution, since as far as I know, that's part of the reason it was considered de jure parliamentary for as long as it was, since the presidential separation of powers was supposedly constitutional convention rather than binding law. – GlowstoneUnknown (Talk) 12:33, 24 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The veto is mentioned in the constitution in Article 122, section 5:
"If the President of the Republic has not made reference to the Constitutional Tribunal in accordance with para. 3, he may refer the bill, with reasons given, to the Sejm for its reconsideration. If the said bill is repassed by the Sejm by a three-fifths majority vote in the presence of at least half of the statutory number of Deputies, then, the President of the Republic shall sign it within 7 days and shall order its promulgation in the Journal of Laws of the Republic of Poland (Dziennik Ustaw). If the said bill has been repassed by the Sejm, the President of the Republic shall have no right to refer it to the Constitutional Tribunal in accordance with the procedure prescribed in para. 3." HapHaxion (talk / contribs) 17:07, 18 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]
A presidential veto is present in several parliamentary republics. Meellk (talk) 18:19, 29 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Presidential and semi-presidential systems have popularly elected president with one of significant executive powers listed above. If a president isn't popularly elected or doesn't have significant executive powers, it's parliamentary system. -- Svito3 (talk) 16:30, 3 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Czechia has a popularly elected president with the exact same powers as the one in Poland 83.6.206.183 (talk) 02:43, 4 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Czech Republic has started electing president relatively recently starting with 2013 Czech presidential election. President of Czech Republic has much weaker veto power than president of Poland and it requires separate discussion if it qualifies as semi-presidential system. President of Poland can veto any bill for any reason, and that veto requires extraordinary majority to overcome. On that reason alone it's semi-presidential republic. For Czech Republic we need to find out if majority required to overcome veto is higher than one needed to pass the bill. It would of course fall under semi-presidential system if that's true on that feature alone. But that's for another discussion. Svito3 (talk) 16:27, 4 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Presidential veto in Czechia is bypassed with 50% of the vote in the lower chamber, and in Poland 60% (not even 2/3). Not a big difference. Check out articles 133 and 146 of the Constitution of Poland. The executive lies squarely with the Council of Ministers. It's a parliamentary system where parliamentary elections matter most. The current PM of Poland wasn't even selected by the President but by Parliament 83.6.206.183 (talk) 18:43, 4 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
This doesn't refute my point that president is popularly elected and has significant powers according to academic definition. -- Svito3 (talk) 19:22, 4 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
There is no single academic definition of a semi-presidential system. The official encyclopedia of Poland, Poland's Britannica, states that Poland's system is parliamentary. Likewise so do all the other secondary academic sources in Poland. Or are Polish sources considered inferior and unreliable as pertains to... the system in Poland? A semi-presidential system is characterized by the co-existence of President with Prime Minister, whereby the President appoints the Prime Minister and is clearly above the presidentially-nominated government, see France. Au contraire, the current Polish government for example, wasn't even appointed by the president, but by parliament, independently. The president served a ceremonial role - swearing-in. 83.6.206.183 (talk) 04:16, 7 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Why is 60% vs 2/3 relevant here? They're both above 50% (the minimum to pass legislation normally) Czechia's veto is suspensatory, it just forces parliament to re-read the proposed legislation, the parliament can pass it again if the governing parties have even a single-seat majority. Poland's (under some circumstances) requires parliament to alter the legislation to appease non-government parties represented in the Sejm to support it unless the governing party/coalition has a supermajority. – GlowstoneUnknown (Talk) 03:00, 5 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
It's not 50% of the quorum though, but 50% of all seats i.e. absolute majority. The vast majority of bills pass without an absolute majority but rather with just a majority in the quorum (present deputies). It presents a stopgap. The Czech president can also refer a bill to the constitutional tribunal all the same. It's called checks and balances, having it doesn't mean it's a semi-presidential system though, that's asinine. A semi-presidential system is characterized by the co-existence of President with Prime Minister, whereby the President appoints the Prime Minister and is clearly above the presidentially-nominated government, see France. Au contraire, the current Polish government for example, wasn't even appointed by the president, but by parliament, independently. The president served a ceremonial role - swearing-in. 83.6.206.183 (talk) 04:14, 7 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
CONSTITUTION OF POLAND
Chapter VI
THE COUNCIL OF MINISTERS AND GOVERNMENT ADMINISTRATION
Article 146
1. The Council of Ministers shall conduct the internal affairs and foreign policy of the Republic of Poland.
2. The Council of Ministers shall conduct the affairs of State not reserved to other State organs or local self-government.
3. The Council of Ministers shall manage the government administration.
etc. Meellk (talk) 18:27, 29 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The Polish term for the structure of government in Poland is system parlamentarno-gabinetowy (cabinet-parliamentary system). The Polish equivalent of the Britannica, Encyklopedia PWN, describes the system such (Google translation):
parliamentary-cabinet system, a set of political and constitutional principles defining the mutual relationship between parliament and the executive (head of state and government) in such a way that the government headed by the prime minister is appointed and dismissed by the head of state (monarch or president), and is politically accountable to parliament through a vote of no confidence; the executive has the right to dissolve parliament; the government is appointed from among the representatives of the party (or coalition) with a majority in parliament; the head of state is not politically accountable to parliament, but is accountable to members of the government who countersign his official acts.; the parliamentary-cabinet system was formed in the 18th century in Great Britain; it is currently found in Great Britain, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium, Greece, Spain, and the Scandinavian countries, among others; it dominated the Polish constitution of March 1921.[1] In other words, a parliamentary republic, like Italy. Meellk (talk) 18:37, 29 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]
What matters is whether the President holds executive power or not and whether it's the President or the Parliament that names the head of government/the cabinet. We also have reliable sources and a consensus on another page that agree the country is semi-presidential. – GlowstoneUnknown (Talk) 00:45, 30 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Another page is another page. Too few users edit List pages to be relevant.
As for the executive, as article 146 and article 133 demonstrate, it lies chiefly with the Council of Ministers (which conducts both the internal and foreign affairs). The presidency is a mostly representative role, with the other role being that of a check&balance. The system in Poland is almost exactly the same as the one that formed in the Czech Republic, with the exception being that the presidential veto can be overridden with an absolute majority (50%) while in Poland - 60%. Meellk (talk) 14:34, 30 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Upon re-reading the article of the constitution that initially changed my mind to support semi-presidential (Article 10), I see that the executive is not solely vested in the hands of the President, but simultaneously in the President and the CoM, I'll change my support to "parliamentary" in that case. – GlowstoneUnknown (Talk) 14:42, 30 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]
This doesn't refute points from Søberg cited by LVDP01 above. -- Svito3 (talk) 16:05, 3 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Furthermore-
CONSTITUTION OF POLAND
Chapter V
THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF POLAND
Article 133
3. The President of the Republic shall cooperate with the Prime Minister and the appropriate minister in respect of foreign policy. Meellk (talk) 18:46, 29 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Is nobody concerned with how reliable secondary sources describe Poland? That should be what is discussed here, rather than Wikipedia editors' own interpretations of the constitution. Phil Bridger (talk) 21:56, 4 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The official encyclopedia of Poland, Poland's Britannica, states that Poland's system is parliamentary. Likewise so do all the other secondary academic sources in Poland. Or are Polish sources considered inferior and unreliable as pertains to... the system in Poland? 83.6.206.183 (talk) 04:15, 7 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
They are still secondary sources, created by authors with an academic background. You cannot dismiss them simply because they are not Polish. To put words into our mouth that make it sound like we regard Polish sources as "inferior" is not constructive, and if anything this (along with creating another thread down below to demand for PavKIs's edit to be reverted, and calling our point of view "asinine") comes over as needlessly passive-aggressive.
PavKIs has correctly pointed out that the President of Poland has some genuine power that a regular parliamentary president would not, including that to ininitiate legislation, as confirmed by a Polish government website. Note how this list of official acts the president can do on his own also includes, I quote, "Designating and appointing the Prime Minister", as well as independently choosing and appointing members of several other offices (like those of several courts and of the National Monetary Council). Furthermore, while the Czech president's veto requires a regular majority to overcome (and thus, in practice, is largely a symbolic veto), the Polish presidential vote can only be overcome by a three-fifths supermajority. This effectively stops the bill dead in its tracks (those who voted against will do so again), unless it is modified to convince more parliamentarians to vote on it. This gives the President of Poland – popularly elected by the people – direct power to counteract the legislature.
You mention France as a consistent example of what a "real" semi-presidential republic should be like, but miss the fact that Portugal, Romania, Mongolia, and several former Portuguese colonies (East Timor, Cape Verde, São Tome and Príncipe) are also semi-presidential republics in spite of having a weaker presidency in comparison. Their presidencies do not have some of the powers that Macron has, such as to initiate legislation or to choose a PM freely, but they can still provide a direct check on the influence and will of parliament, such as by dissolving it (out of their own volition; in Portugal this is called "the nuclear bomb") or by issuing a veto that requires a supermajority to overcome. Not every semi-presidential system has to be a replica of the Fifth Republic. LVDP01 (talk) 08:00, 7 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Czech president can also initiate legislation. It's mmeaningless, the bill can be "frozen" in a Sejm committee forever, parliament and government sets the domestic and foreign policy. Citizens themselves can also initiate legislation, and they're just as "powerless" as the president. Your claim that Poland is a semi-presidential systeem is disproved by empirical observation of the events in Poland - the president is powerless and does not affect neither domestic nor foreign policy in the slightest. The PM was not appointed by the president and is in direct opposition to the political movement he stems from. In fact the president himself was handpicked by Jarosław Kaczyński the leader of the PiS political party, and has never been a strong political figure. The fact that there are a few descriptions of Poland as a semi-presidential system isn't a consensus, as there is a whole consensus in Poland that it's a parliamentary system, so at best there is no general "international" consensus and we have to defer to the de jure status set in the Constitution - and it's quite explicitly put there that the President's role is to represent the state internationally, while it's the Council of Minister's role to conduct the executive role in domestic and foreign policy. The president does not own the executive as it happens in semi-presidential systems like France - he partakes in the executive merely as a check&balance 83.6.206.183 (talk) 04:20, 8 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]

PM of Poland not even appointed by President - system is parliamentary not semi-presidential

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Kindly requesting any auto-confirmed user to correct a mistaken edit by user PavKIs. How can a system be semi-presidential when the PM wasn't even appointed by the president? And the constitution highlights that both foreign and domestic policy are matters of the PM and the President's role is to represent the state of Poland internationally... this is what the constitution says. The official encyclopedia of Poland, Poland's Britannica, the Encyklopedia PWN, agrees, and this is a reliable source, as well as all secondary academic sources in Poland agree that Poland is a parliamentary system. The system is alike that in the Czech Republic, where the president too is the commander in chief - but this is just a ceremonial position. Compare to France, where President is kingmaker unwaveringly. 83.6.206.183 (talk) 04:23, 7 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Infobox | start of Polish statehood 966

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The official start of Polish statehood was in the year 966 with the Baptism of Poland. This is an undisputed fact stated in virtually all mainstream history books, so why did someone add "Duchy of Poland c. 960"? I guess that editor is either advocating revisionist history or is anti-Christian and can't get over the fact that Poland's acceptance into the Christendom marked its formal beginning. There is 0 historical basis for this claim. 94.172.109.57 (talk) 13:58, 15 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]

No mainstream historical book claims that 966 is a start of Polish statehood. This is impossible, Mieszko I was a ruler for couple years before his baptism and the state existed also before that. According to archelogical findings nowadays we date start of the Polish statehood at least at the 3rd-4th decade of the 10th century. Marcelus (talk) 14:06, 15 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
User:Marcelus your not even serious... read the article Millennium of the Polish State and all the sources cited there. Also, Britannica says "Mieszko accepted Roman Catholicism via Bohemia in 966. A missionary bishopric directly dependent on the papacy was established in Poznań. This was the true beginning of Polish history, for Christianity was a carrier of Western civilization with which Poland was henceforth associated." Great... we have revisionists writing this article now. --94.172.109.57 (talk) 14:13, 15 October 2024 (UTC) Now you and user:FeldmarschallGneisenau who added this bogus claim will argue ad nauseam that the sky is red not blue and up is down. --94.172.109.57 (talk) 14:17, 15 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Here is PDF from the Institute of National Remembrance and guess what date it uses as the start.. 966: https://ipn.gov.pl/download/2/43696/PrzewodnikpohistoriiPolski.pdf --94.172.109.57 (talk) 14:21, 15 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not familiar with the early history of Poland so I'm not going to get involved too much in the discussion, just wanted to leave a link to a previous discussion on the topic in case it's useful Talk:Poland/Archive 6#Formation date. Suonii180 (talk) 14:48, 15 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Sources that confirm 966:

User:Marcelus you are dishonest and manipulative when you say that: "No mainstream historical books claims that 966 is a start of Polish statehood." There are multiple sources that say otherwise. But unfortunately there are deniers of Christianity and it's role in history. Editors like you damage Wikipedia's reliability because they push their revisionist fantasies instead of verifiable facts. --94.172.109.57 (talk) 18:46, 15 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Also, this is what the source currently attached to "Duchy of Poland c. 960" says in order to falsely back up the year in question: "The dukes (dux) were originally the commanders of an armed retinue (drużyna) with which they broke the authority of the chieftains of the clans, thus transforming the original tribal organization into a territorial unit." How, does that remotely support the year c. 960? Complete BS is being pushed onto Wikipedia. --94.172.109.57 (talk) 11:29, 16 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Previously used sources for Poland's supposed semi-presidentiality - removable

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Poland did not strike me as a semi-presidential country. I thus went over the several sources supposedly backing Poland being a semi-presidential system. I found what follows:

  • 1st source is just a link to the constitution, without any commentary - not only a primary source, it doesn't support the statement at all.
  • 2nd source is outdated and comes from before the current Constitution went in force.
  • "3rd" faulty source is the same work (same title) by the same author, re-published, cited twice.
  • 4th source only academically discusses the features of semi-presidentiality in Poland, does not conclude Poland is semi-presidential, in fact clearly states the parliament (Sejm) picks the Prime Minister and most heavily weighs on government.

In view of this, I removed these citations whose source material either is faulty or deviates from the original statement. Comparing with the nation's page on its own Wikipedia (the Polish Wikipedia) I found a source that backs the country being a parliamentary system. Going over the discussions in this Talk section, I found more sources for this. Having done my homework, with this research, I applied the edit. Mr. Maralago pawn (talk) 12:52, 16 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

May someone point me to where this user consensus is supposed to be? And on what sources is it based, since these have been discarded. I don't see any consensus here. Was there some RfC that was archived? Mr. Maralago pawn (talk) 20:56, 16 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Those sources weren't discarded by anyone else but you. You have swapped all of those sources to push your POV. -- Svito3 (talk) 14:07, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I'm gonna pull the people who took part in the discussion on Talk:List of countries by system of government and the previous discussion on this page in here to discuss this. I think I've stated before that I have no strong preferences towards either label, as long as it's consistent and the articles don't contradict each other, but just in case, I want to reiterate. Either label is fine as long as it can be backed up by secondary sources, I only want to stop any edit warring that leads to the two articles having conflicting information from different sources.
Users: @Svito3, @Moxy @Wtmitchell @ICommandeth @LVDP01 @Meellk. – GlowstoneUnknown (Talk) 04:16, 23 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thinking that we need to see all the sources that have been discussed in one place (here) so we can evaluate them with others input. Moxy🍁 04:19, 23 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I believe these 5 are the main ones that were used on both articles, but someone please correct me if there were more.
[1][2][3][4][5] – GlowstoneUnknown (Talk) 04:23, 23 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
the now used 4 sources are (for posterity):
[6][7][8][9] 2A00:F41:1CE5:603F:5997:40B1:4CCD:5EAC (talk) 19:15, 23 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
It's late here and I do not have the time to discuss the "faultiness" of these sources, nor the energy to immediately inspect them. Until further discussion can happen though (to which I would like to invite to Svito3, since they could explain fairly well why they believed Poland to be semi-presidential), I did find this: as reported in this article (which described events of barely a year ago), the President of Poland can designate the prime minister. This PM must survive a confidence vote within two weeks of being chosen; should they lose, parliament decides the PM. The President generally invested the leader of the winning party for much of Polish history, but this seems to be entirely by informal convention; the President is clearly capable of designating someone else, and even if he ultimately chose not to, Duda seems to have at least considered to designate a PM from the second largest party instead, bypassing PiS in doing so.
The Constitution of Poland corroborates this:

Article 154 [Nomination of the Prime Minister]
(1) The President of the Republic shall nominate a Prime Minister who shall propose the composition of a Council of Ministers. The President of the Republic shall, within 14 days of the first sitting of the House of Representatives (Sejm) or acceptance of the resignation of the previous Council of Ministers, appoint a Prime Minister together with other members of a Council of Ministers and accept the oaths of office of members of such newly appointed Council of Ministers.
(2) The Prime Minister shall, within 14 days following the day of his appointment by the President of the Republic, submit a program of activity of the Council of Ministers to the House of Representatives (Sejm), together with a motion requiring a vote of confidence. The House of Representatives (Sejm) shall pass such vote of confidence by an absolute majority of votes in the presence of at least half of the statutory number of Deputies.
(3) In the event that a Council of Ministers has not been appointed pursuant to Paragraph (1) above or has failed to obtain a vote of confidence in accordance with Paragraph (2) above, the House of Representatives (Sejm), within 14 days of the end of the time periods specified in Paragraphs (1) and (2), shall choose a Prime Minister as well as members of the Council of Ministers as proposed by him, by an absolute majority of votes in the presence of at least half of the statutory number of Deputies. The President of the Republic shall appoint the Council of Ministers so chosen and accept the oaths of office of its members.

It clearly says that the President gets to choose a PM (1) and that the ultimate choice only falls to the legislature should the President's candidate lose a confidence vote (3).
A directly elected president with the ability to choose a PM and block legislation (through a veto that requires a supermajority, preventing the law from simply being passed again) is textbook semi-presidential. LVDP01 (talk) 21:16, 23 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The same rights are bestowed upon the presidents of Austria and the Czech Republic - both widely designated as parliamentary systems. 2A00:F41:1C37:C415:B9E9:8DAB:6953:1091 (talk) 16:05, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
just copying what was written above (in support of Poland being a parliamentary system):
  • CONSTITUTION OF POLAND
Chapter V
THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF POLAND
Article 133
3. The President of the Republic shall cooperate with the Prime Minister and the appropriate minister in respect of foreign policy.
Chapter VI
THE COUNCIL OF MINISTERS AND GOVERNMENT ADMINISTRATION
Article 146
1. The Council of Ministers shall conduct the internal affairs and foreign policy of the Republic of Poland.
2. The Council of Ministers shall conduct the affairs of State not reserved to other State organs or local self-government.
3. The Council of Ministers shall manage the government administration. 2A00:F41:1C37:C415:B9E9:8DAB:6953:1091 (talk) 16:08, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
worth also pointing out what User:Phil Bridger said "Is nobody concerned with how reliable secondary sources describe Poland? That should be what is discussed here, rather than Wikipedia editors' own interpretations of the constitution." 2A00:F41:1C37:C415:B9E9:8DAB:6953:1091 (talk) 16:11, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for linking that article List of countries by system of government , and showing it to me. The same faulty sources are copied there, so it clearly needs to be changed just as this page was. Mr. Maralago pawn (talk) 17:56, 23 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Søberg source at least defines what semi-presidential system is and how it's different from both parliamentary system and presidential system. Even if Poland has changed since then argument and definitions apply unless you can find better and similarly comprehensive source for distinctions between those systems.
Encyclopedia PWN simply says Poland is parliamentary republic with no explanation of neither what semi-presidential system is nor why Poland is parliamentary republic. It's not a subject of Encyclopedia PWN articles to even study these systems, nor we have any idea from their article if their writer is aware of these concepts. -- Svito3 (talk) 13:53, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Svito3 @LVDP01 @MaralagoPawn @Moxy @ICommandeth @Wtmitchell @Meellk Can we just sort this out so it doesn't keep going back and forth please? I'd like to establish a clear consensus on what sources are to be used and what aren't and the reasons for or against each label. – GlowstoneUnknown (Talk) 06:43, 6 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Sure. I can take a look in the weekend.
Note that MaralagoPawn was identified as a sockpuppet and is now blocked. LVDP01 (talk) 10:07, 6 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Having taken a look myself, I am currently inclined to stick to the academic sources used to uphold Poland as a semi-presidential country. OP mentioned that these sources have become outdated since they predate current the constitution, but did not specify why they are now outdated (i.e. which change in the constitution led to a switch to parliamentarianism).
Søberg points out that even if Poland's president has less discretion in forming a cabinet, they still possess a veto that requires a supermajority to overcome, including one that they can use for policy preference/disagreement. The official Polish parliament's website corroborates this, as does the presidential website; subsequently, I believe that Søberg's conclusion is still usable. LVDP01 (talk) 19:09, 7 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I agree. Maybe we can hold a big meeting to discuss all this, not just for Poland but other countries that seem to get swept up in this, like austria ICommandeth (talk) 15:20, 6 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

References

  1. ^ "Poland 1997 (rev. 2009)". www.constituteproject.org. Retrieved 9 October 2021.
  2. ^ Veser, Ernst [in German] (23 September 1997). "Semi-Presidentialism-Duverger's Concept — A New Political System Model" (PDF). Department of Education, School of Education, University of Cologne, zh. pp. 39–60. Retrieved 21 August 2017. Duhamel has developed the approach further: He stresses that the French construction does not correspond to either parliamentary or the presidential form of government, and then develops the distinction of 'système politique' and 'régime constitutionnel'. While the former comprises the exercise of power that results from the dominant institutional practice, the latter is the totality of the rules for the dominant institutional practice of power. In this way, France appears as 'presidentialist system' endowed with a 'semi-presidential regime' (1983: 587). By this standard, he recognizes Duverger's pléiade as semi-presidential regimes, as well as Poland, Romania, Bulgaria and Lithuania (1993: 87).
  3. ^ Shugart, Matthew Søberg (September 2005). "Semi-Presidential Systems: Dual Executive and Mixed Authority Patterns" (PDF). Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 August 2008. Retrieved 21 August 2017.
  4. ^ Shugart, Matthew Søberg (December 2005). "Semi-Presidential Systems: Dual Executive And Mixed Authority Patterns" (PDF). French Politics. 3 (3): 323–351. doi:10.1057/palgrave.fp.8200087. Retrieved 21 August 2017. Even if the president has no discretion in the forming of cabinets or the right to dissolve parliament, his or her constitutional authority can be regarded as 'quite considerable' in Duverger's sense if cabinet legislation approved in parliament can be blocked by the people's elected agent. Such powers are especially relevant if an extraordinary majority is required to override a veto, as in Mongolia, Poland, and Senegal. In these cases, while the government is fully accountable to Parliament, it cannot legislate without taking the potentially different policy preferences of the president into account.
  5. ^ McMenamin, Iain. "Semi-Presidentialism and Democratisation in Poland" (PDF). School of Law and Government, Dublin City University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 February 2012. Retrieved 11 December 2017.
  6. ^ Wiesław Skrzydło (2008). Ustrój polityczny RP w świetle Konstytucji z 1997 r. Wolters Kluwer Polska Sp. z o.o. p. 69. ISBN 978-83-7526-573-6.
  7. ^ "system parlamentarno-gabinetowy". Polskie Wydawnictwo Nauk.
  8. ^ "Konstytucja RP". Encyklopedia PWN.
  9. ^ Leszek Garlicki (2007). Polish constitutional law. Liber. p. 25. ISBN 978-83-7206-142-3.

Polland not Poland

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The name of the Polish state was incorrectly translated into English as Poland, long time ago. The correct name should be Polland with double "l" because it's the land of the Polish people, not the land of a "Po" people. Similar to that, the following names were created: Finland Fin + land Holland Hol + land Switzerland Switzer + land and so on A big mistake was made long time ago. Poland should change its name into Polland. 49.190.246.76 (talk) 04:33, 17 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

It is not our job to change that, even if what you say is true. See WP:RGW. Phil Bridger (talk) 09:50, 17 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Take it up with the United Nations and the Republic of Poland, if they agree to change the country's official English name, the same can happen to this article. – GlowstoneUnknown (Talk) 04:06, 23 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Semi-protected edit request on 12 December 2024

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The government in Poland is a unitary parliamentary republic, not a semi-presidental republic even if it has elements similar to this system. The elements that declares the parliamentary system in Poland are written in the Polish constitution.

sorces: https://www.gov.pl/web/civilservice/basic-information-about-poland https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parliamentary_republic chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://pkw.gov.pl/uploaded_files/1450053460_konstytucja_rzeczypospolitej_polskiej.pdf TheKamines (talk) 16:05, 12 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Your first edit in all of Wikipedia's history is to this talk page, suspiciously briefly after a sockpuppet with the same opinion was caught and blocked.
You're not even trying to hide it. LVDP01 (talk) 20:19, 12 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Looking over this message again, I realize that the last sentence was unnecessary and likely appears unintentionally rude, so I take that back.
Nonetheless, I consider sockpuppetry likely, and have thus requested an investigation. LVDP01 (talk) 20:55, 12 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
 Not done for now: please establish a consensus for this alteration before using the {{Edit semi-protected}} template. M.Bitton (talk) 01:35, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]


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