Catholic Electoral Action Wyborcza Akcja Katolicka | |
---|---|
Founded | October 1990 |
Dissolved | November 1991 |
Headquarters | Warsaw, Poland |
Ideology | National conservatism[1] National Catholicism[2] Political Catholicism[3] Pro-Europeanism[4] |
Political position | Right-wing[5] |
Members | Christian National Union Union of Catholic Laity Christian Civic Movement Federation of Kresy Organisations Citizens' Committees |
Colours | Blue Black |
Catholic Electoral Action (Polish: Wyborcza Akcja Katolicka), abbreviated as WAK, was a right-wing electoral committee that participated in the 1991 Polish parliamentary election. The committee was formed in October 1990 and consisted of 20 various groupings that split from Solidarity.[6] The committee's members belonged to the National-Catholic and national conservative Christian National Union.[7] Led by Wiesław Chrzanowski, Catholic Electoral Action won 49 seats in the Sejm and 9 seats in Senat during the 1991 poll.[8] The committee claimed support from the Roman Catholic Church and received relatively strong support in rural areas.[7] Following the election's conclusion, the Christian National Union disbanded its nom de guerre Catholic Electoral Action, sitting in parliament under the party's actual name.[9]
The coalition was National-Catholic and went beyond the tenets of Christian democracy. The Catholic Electoral Action argued that state policies in Poland should be based on Catholicism, and saw the Catholic Church as a "source" of the Polish nation and identity. The coalition sought to make Poland an explicitly Catholic nation and state.[3] It condemned "materialist" and communist influences prevalent in Poland and argued that the instability and then downfall of the communist regime in the 1980s was caused by its attempt to remove Catholicism from public life.[10] Despite presenting itself as a confessional party based on political Catholicism, the Catholic Electoral Action was strongly supportive of free-market economy and had a staunchly pro-EU and pro-USA orientation, which ran contrary to the views and statements of the Polish Catholic Church.[2][10]
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