Current:Home > InvestPoland’s new government moves to free state media from previous team’s political control -MarketStream
Poland’s new government moves to free state media from previous team’s political control
View
Date:2025-04-18 00:54:32
WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Poland’s new pro-European Union government said Wednesday that it had changed the directors of state television, radio and the government-run news agency as it embarked on the path of freeing publicly-owned media from the political control of the previous nationalist conservative administration.
The Cabinet of Prime Minister Donald Tusk, which took office last week, has made it a priority to restore objectivity and free expression in state media, which the previous government, under the Law and Justice party, used as aggressive propaganda tools, attacking Tusk and the opposition and spreading its euroskeptic views.
The new government’s first steps toward a return to media freedom were met with protest by Law and Justice. Party leader Jarosław Kaczyński and many lawmakers occupied buildings housing the offices of state-run television TVP in the hopes that their supporters would come out to demonstrate in big numbers.
While that didn’t happen, some of the Law and Justice officials still hadn’t left the TVP facilities. But there was no police presence or signs of any violence.
On Tuesday, Polish lawmakers adopted a resolution presented by Tusk’s government calling for the restoration of “legal order, objectivity and fairness” of TVP, Polish Radio and the PAP news agency.
Following the resolution, Poland’s new culture minister, Bartłomiej Sienkiewicz, replaced the heads and the supervisory boards of state media, which chose new management.
The new head of TVP’s supervisory board, Piotr Zemła, a lawyer, came to the broadcaster’s headquarters on Wednesday.
In the first sign of change, the all-news TVP INFO channel, one of the previous government’s main propaganda tools, ceased to broadcast on air and over the internet on Wednesday morning.
Earlier this week, the previous ruling team called a rally at the state television building to protest any planned changes, but only a few hundred people turned up.
President Andrzej Duda, who was an ally of the previous government, has warned that he won’t accept moves that he believes to be against the law. However, his critics have long accused him of violating the Polish Constitution and other laws as he tried to support the policies of the Law and Justice party.
The government took office last week and began reversing policies of the previous administration that many in Poland found divisive.
Parties that make up the new government collectively won the majority of votes in the Oct. 15 election. They have vowed to jointly govern under the leadership of Tusk, who served as prime minister in 2007-2014 and was head of the European Council in 2014-2019.
veryGood! (53825)
Related
- Vance jokes he’s checking out his future VP plane while overlapping with Harris at Wisconsin airport
- Mormon church selects British man from lower-tier council for top governing body
- How sex (and sweets) helped bring Emma Stone's curious 'Poor Things' character to life
- Buffalo Bills coach Sean McDermott 'regretted' using 9/11 reference in 2019 team meeting
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- New aid pledges for Ukraine fall to lowest levels since the start of the war, report says
- French police address fear factor ahead of the Olympic Games after a deadly attack near Eiffel Tower
- Bills coach Sean McDermott apologizes for crediting 9/11 hijackers for their coordination while talking to team in 2019
- New Orleans mayor’s former bodyguard making first court appearance after July indictment
- Everyone knows Booker T adlibs for WWE's Trick Williams. But he also helped NXT star grow
Ranking
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Tulane University students build specially designed wheelchairs for children with disabilities
- Derek Hough reveals his wife, Hayley Erbert, had emergency brain surgery after burst blood vessel
- Two men in Alabama riverfront brawl plead guilty to harassment; assault charges dropped
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Top-ranking Democrat won’t seek reelection next year in GOP-dominated Kentucky House
- Mexico raids and closes 31 pharmacies in Ensenada that were selling fentanyl-laced pills
- 2 nurses, medical resident injured in attack at New Jersey hospital, authorities say
Recommendation
Sam Taylor
FDA approves gene-editing treatment for sickle cell disease
Ukraine’s human rights envoy calls for a faster way to bring back children deported by Russia
Amazon asks federal judge to dismiss the FTC’s antitrust lawsuit against the company
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
2 journalists are detained in Belarus as part of a crackdown on dissent
Buffalo Bills coach Sean McDermott 'regretted' using 9/11 reference in 2019 team meeting
Utah attorney general drops reelection bid amid scrutiny about his ties to a sexual assault suspect