Poland POLITICAL SETTING
Lech Walesa, Solidarity leader and first postcommunist
president.
CourtesyCommittee in Support of Solidarity, New York
General Wojciech Jaruzelski, last communist leader of
Poland.
Courtesy United Press International
In August 1980, faced with an increasingly severe
economic
crisis and social unrest that had been building throughout
the
1970s, the communist government reluctantly conceded legal
status
to an independent labor federation, Solidarity
(Solidarnosc).
After monopolizing power for thirty-five years without
genuine
sanction from Polish society, the communist Polish United
Workers' Party (Polska Zjednoczona Partia
Robotnicza--PZPR) found
itself in contention with an alternative source of
political
power that had a valid claim to represent the country's
working
people. Under the threat of general strikes and facing
economic
and political chaos, the regime grudgingly reached a
series of
limited compromises with Solidarity in 1980 and early
1981.
After the government's initial concessions, however,
Solidarity militants insisted on substantially broader
concessions. In response, PZPR hard-liners used the
memories of
the Soviet Union's violent reaction to Czechoslovakia's
moderate
political reforms in 1968 to justify the imposition of
martial
law in December 1981. Solidarity was declared illegal.
General
Wojciech Jaruzelski, earlier that year named prime
minister and
then first secretary of the PZPR, appointed trusted
military men
to key government positions and de-emphasized communist
ideology.
Through the rest of the decade, the government sought in
vain to
recover a degree of legitimacy with the people and to
overcome
the country's severe economic problems. The overtures of
the
Jaruzelski government failed, however, to win the support
of the
Polish people. In a key 1987 national referendum, voters
refused
to support the government's package of painful reforms
needed to
halt the economic slide. Eventually, the government came
to
realize that improvement of the economic situation was not
possible without the explicit support of the Solidarity
opposition. At that point, the government had no choice
but to
enter negotiations with Solidarity.
Data as of October 1992
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