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Polish opposition ready to form govt - Tusk

During the election campaign, Donald Tusk pledged to rebuild relations with the EU
During the election campaign, Donald Tusk pledged to rebuild relations with the EU

Poland's liberal opposition which won a majority in the general election has said it was ready to forge a coalition and urged the country's conservative president to entrust it with forming a new government.

"I'm counting on constructive cooperation with the president and on quick decisions. The Polish people are waiting for it. We are ready to work anytime," opposition leader Donald Tusk said as he confirmed he would be the bloc's prime minister candidate.

Poland's ruling populist Law and Justice (PiS) party emerged first after the 15 October vote but fell short of a parliamentary majority and has little chance to forge a coalition.

Today, Poland's President Andrzej Duda, allied with PiS, launched a series of meetings with party leaders to determine whom he would tap to form a government.

The leaders of the liberal opposition parties have jointly called on President Duda to nominate Mr Tusk.

"We are determined to form a majority, together we will nominate today and tomorrow at the president's office our candidate for prime minister, the leader of Civic Platform, Donald Tusk," co-leader of the centrist Third Way party Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz said.

"We will assure the president that we have a majority to elect the prime minister and to appoint the speaker" of the Sejm lower house of parliament and the Senate, Kosiniak-Kamysz told reporters.

Civic Platform and Third Way intend to enter an alliance with Left, the three parties jointly having 248 lawmakers in the 460-seat parliament.

Mr Tusk, formerly president of the European Council and Poland's prime minister, is set to travel to Brussels tomorrow.

During the election campaign, Mr Tusk pledged to rebuild relations with the EU and to unblock funds frozen due to an ongoing standoff over the rule of law in Poland.