1989 Polish presidential election

1989 Polish presidential election

19 July 1989

Needed to win: Majority of members present, excluding invalid votes
537 valid voters in the National Assembly
269 votes needed to win
 
Nominee Wojciech Jaruzelski
Party PZPR
Alliance PRON
Electoral vote 270
Percentage 50.28%
Nominators PZPR, ZSL, SD, PAX, UChS, PZKS


Chairman of the Council of State before election

Wojciech Jaruzelski
PZPR

Elected President

Wojciech Jaruzelski
PZPR

Indirect presidential elections were held in Poland on 19 July 1989. The elections were the first after the office of President of the Republic of Poland had been re-established after a period of Communist rule and were the last in which the President was elected by Parliament (joint houses of the Sejm and Senate). Despite adoption of the democratic system there was only one candidate.

After the Round Table Agreement, which resulted in a semi-free parliamentary election, marked by effective Solidarity victory and de facto loss of the Polish United Workers' Party, on July 4, 1989, Adam Michnik proposed a power-sharing deal between communist and the democratic opposition (Your President, our Prime Minister), according to which Chairman of the Council of State and Communist leader Wojciech Jaruzelski would become president and a Solidarity representative would become Prime Minister (this position indeed went to Tadeusz Mazowiecki in August, albeit after an attempt by Jaruzelski to impose fellow PZPR member Czesław Kiszczak as Prime Minister). After much debate within both camps this conception won.

Jaruzelski ran unopposed, but won by just a one-vote majority needed, as many Solidarity MPs, while supporting the agreement, felt just unable to cast their votes or, to not disturb the process, cast abstain or invalid votes.