51 percent of Poles are negative about the government's actions to date; 39 percent of respondents are positive, and 10 percent have no opinion - according to the survey study Opinion24 for Radio ZET.
The surveyors - as the station stated on Wednesday - were asked a question "How do you mostly measure the government's actions to date?".
39 percent of those surveyed rated them positively - the option "decisively well" chose 8 percent of respondents, while "preferably well" - 31 percent.
In turn, 51 percent of respondents misjudged them, including "decisively wrong" - 29 percent, and "perhaps wrong" - 22 percent of respondents chose the option "difficult to say".
"Sondage commissioned by Radio ZET shows visible differences in the assessment of Donald Tusk's government changing depending on the age and education of the respondents. The government's assessment powerfully correlates organization and presidential preferences, indicating a clear division of public opinion" - the station describes.
Negative evaluation of over half of Poles
When describing the results of the study, it was indicated that Government negative assessments prevail in all age groups. Also, negative assessments prevail in almost all educationally differentiated groups. "Analysis of assessments of the coalition government's actions to date on October 15 in the context of political sympathy of those participating in the poll for ZET Radio reveals crucial differences. It besides shows impatience or discouragement among supporters of the camp of power" - noted.
The survey was carried out from 2 to 6 April 2025 on a typical example of 1002 Poles aged 18 and over. The percentages were rounded to full.
Source: ZET Radio / PAP















