Monday, 24 September, 2001, 17:49 GMT 18:49 UK

RealPlayer Audio Link:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/olmedia/1560000/audio/_1560366_poland13_kiepuszewski.r
am
Rafal Kiepuszewski, Polish Radio "It is definitely the end of a political
era"

Goodbye Solidarity
=============
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/europe/newsid_1561000/1561473.stm
Solidarity's golden age was in 1989 and the early 90s

The BBC's Central Europe analyst, Jan Repa, explains why Polish voters have
consigned Solidarity to oblivion, 12 years after the fall of communism.

Poland's Solidarity movement has been crushed in Sunday's parliamentary
elections, failing to win a single seat.

Solidarity claimed a moral superiority over the ex-communists but delivered
a display of infighting and amateurishness

The winners are the Democratic Left Alliance - which is led by former
communists but whose policies are close to West European centre-left parties
like the German Social Democrats and Britain's New Labour.

Solidarity activists were always reluctant to describe themselves as
belonging to a political party.
Solidarity was an "ethos", a "movement".

More mundane issues like policies, organisation and discipline tended to be
relegated to second place.
Splinter movements

The Solidarity bloc, which held office for the past four years, was actually
a coalition of several dozen political and social groups - trade unionists,
liberals, Catholic nationalists and many besides.

Wipe-out: Solidarity owes its defeat to more than just painful reforms

In some ways, it was a wonder that it survived as long as it did.
Last year, Solidarity suffered a major setback when its coalition partner,
the Freedom Union, left the government.
The Freedom Union, which included many of the old dissident intellectual
heavyweights, also lost all its parliamentary seats on Sunday.

Back in January, Solidarity itself splintered, with several high-profile
personalities - self-declared centre-right liberals - going off to found a
new party, called Civic Platform.

Civic Platform came a distant second on Sunday, behind the Democratic Left
Alliance.
Solidarity's apologists claim that the movement has paid the price for
implementing painful social and economic reforms - and for an economic
downturn, whose origins lie outside Poland. But that cannot really explain
Sunday's wipe-out.
Escape to the future

Many Solidarity politicians talked in terms of washing away the residue of
the communist party.
This implied that there was an "authentic" Poland, ready to appear from
behind the facade of a temporary occupation regime - a difficult thesis to
sustain after half a century of Communism.

For many of Poland's younger voters, the distinction between Solidarity and
ex-communists appeared increasingly irrelevant

The Democratic Left Alliance offered a less heroic but more popular
message - let's forget the past by escaping into the future.
Solidarity claimed a moral superiority over the ex-communists.

What the Polish public got was a display of factional infighting, personal
ambition, ideological obsessiveness and amateurishness.

Unlike Solidarity, the Democratic Left Alliance never made the mistake of
patronising the Polish voter. Solidarity often appeared to be talking at,
rather than to, the ordinary citizen.
Catholic competition

The trouble with conviction politics is that there is always someone even
more committed than yourself.

Pope John Paul II endorsed solidarity in 1981

Solidarity's self-proclaimed "Catholic" faction talked of "Polish
tradition", "family values", and the dangers of Western liberalism.

The Polish Family League - a recently formed Catholic fundamentalist party
outside the Solidarity bloc - talked of an international plot to destroy
Catholicism and the Polish identity through membership of the European
Union - and won itself some seats in parliament at Solidarity's expense.

For many of Poland's younger voters, the distinction between Solidarity and
ex-communists appeared increasingly irrelevant.
What the Democratic Left Alliance promises is competent, middle-of-the-road
policies, aimed at anchoring Poland ever more firmly in the West.

Now they need to deliver.

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