In his recording on the X platform Przemysław Czarnek tries to build a clear contrast. First, he emphasizes that he has large respect for the youngest volunteers who stand in the cold and wind with cans, collecting money for medical equipment.
After this introduction, the speech of the recording changes rapidly. Czarnek goes to the harsh criticism of Jerzy Owsiak, accusing him that alternatively of uniting Poles around the good, he manipulates public opinion. It points to the speech of the head of WEDS, in which the motive for "surviving evil" appears. In the communicative of the erstwhile Minister of Education it is proof of the political character of the Orchestra and building a division between "good" and "bad".
In this way, the WOŚP in Czarnek's eyes ceases to be a purely charity action, and becomes a tool for the worldview dispute in which Jerzy Owsiak, in his opinion, is to play a function not only as a fundraising organizer but besides as a political symbol.
Millions per WOŚP versus hundreds of millions of NFZ debt
The most crucial component of Czarnka's message is the financial statement. The politician reaches for hard numbers to show that he believes the real problem is not how much money he collects, but how much the state does not pay hospitals.
The erstwhile minister states that only 2 Lublin hospitals – the Centre for Oncology of Lublin Land and the facility at Kraśnicka Street – have outstanding debts to the National wellness Fund for last year, which together exceed PLN 100 million. It's a sum comparable to what the Grand Orchestra finale was able to declare by 20.
Czarnek emphasizes that if you look more broadly at the full Lublin Voivodeship, hospitals run by the local government are to have a full amount of over PLN 300 million. Its communicative so presents a simple picture: on the 1 hand, millions of citizens' collection into cans, on the another hand, many times larger amounts, which are not transferred by the body liable for public wellness funding.
The National wellness Fund is simply a central institution that settles with hospitals for services to patients. Czarnek uses this function of NFZ to accuse the government of Donald Tusk and the Citizen Platform environment of negligence, which in his opinion are much more severe than any of Owsiak's words.
"Pads from Platform from Tusk"
The recording ends with a strong, confrontational accent. Czarnek turns straight to political opponents, reaching for a language that is hard to accept as conciliation. In his appeal, he calls on people associated with the Civic Platform and Donald Tusk government to "give money to Polish hospitals".
WOŚP thus becomes truly just a background, and the central mark of the attack is the ruling coalition and the way wellness protection is financed. The PiS politician tries to distract from the emotion around the Orchestra finals into systemic infirmary problems and giant NFZ backlogs.
At the same time, the language he uses emphasizes even more the deep conflict between the Law and the environment associated with the WOŚP and the current camp of power. This is simply a continuation of a long-standing line in which the Orchestra, although formally apolitical, was presented by part of the right as an undertaking ideologically alien to their imagination of the state.








