Half of Poles want the future president to sign the law on the acquisition of atomic weapons – according to a poll for Radio Zet. The biggest support comes from young people and right-wing voters. Is Poland on the verge of a atomic turn in safety policy?
50% of respondents believe that the future president should sign the bill proposed by the Sejm on Poland's acquisition of atomic weapons - according to a poll for Radio Zet. The top support comes from the PiS and Confederacy voters. At the request of Radio ZET, Przemysło Przemysł24 examined whether Poles believe that the future president should support the bill allowing Poland to get atomic weapons if specified a bill were to go from parliament to his desk. Participants of the survey were asked the question: "Do you think that the future president should sign the bill proposed by the Sejm on Poland's acquisition of atomic weapons?". 50% of respondents are in favour of signing specified a law. In this, 24 percent indicated that the president should definitely sign it, and 26 percent replied that "more importantly" should do it. 31 percent of the survey participants are different. 14 percent believe that the president should definitely not sign specified a bill and 17 percent believe that he should not do so. 18 percent of respondents have no opinion on this. The survey shows that men more frequently than women support this idea. More than half of the men surveyed (58%) would like the president to sign specified a bill, while among women this percent is 44 percent. 32 percent of the ladies expressed their opposition to the possible signing of specified a law by the future president compared to 30 percent of the gentlemen. Looking at age groups, the top support for the acquisition of atomic weapons occurs in the group 18-24 years - 64%. Only 24 percent are against it. In the age group 25-29, this is 60% of affirmative responses and 27% of those who object. As the age rises, Poland's support for atomic weapons is decreasing, although it remains comparatively high. The smallest support was recorded among people over the age of 60, where 41% is in favour of the future president approving the atomic reinforcement of our country and 38% against. Opinions on the acquisition of atomic weapons powerfully correlate with electoral preferences. Among the supporters of Rafał Trzaskowski, support for atomic Poland is lowest – 46 percent is in favour and 35 percent against. Among the voters of Szymon Holownia, 72% support this idea, and 22 percent are against it. advanced support for the acquisition of atomic weapons occurs among voters of Karol Nawrocki (69 percent for, 14 percent against) and Sławomir Mentzen (67 percent for, 25 percent against). As with presidential candidates, organization preferences powerfully influence the opinion on the possible consent of the future president to Poland's possession of atomic weapons. The highest support is found among the voters of Law and Justice (67 percent for, 17 percent against) and the Confederation (71 percent for, 24 percent against). Among the 3rd Way voters, where 54 percent are in favour and 27 percent are against. The voters of the Civic Coalition are more divided - 46 percent support the thought and 35 percent are against. The least support exists among fresh Left voters (38 percent for, 45 percent against). The survey was carried out by the Studio of Opinion24 on a typical example of 1002 Poles aged 18 years and more on 2-6 April 2025. The percentages were rounded to full. (PAP)