Survey: 37.7% of Poles do not know if Żurek is better than Bodnar

upday.com 16 hours ago
37.7% of respondents do not know if Waldemar Żurek will be a better minister of justice than Adam Bodnar, 36 percent believe that Żurek will work better, the other is 26.3% - according to the United Surveys survey for Virtual Poland.PAP

**A fresh United Surveys poll for Virtual Poland shows that Poles are divided in the evaluation of Waldemar Żurek's future work as Minister of Justice. The largest group of respondents - 37.7% - cannot measure whether it will be better than its predecessor Adam Bodnar. At the same time, 36 percent of respondents believe that Żurek will work better, while the other opinion is 26.3 percent.**

A survey conducted between 25 and 27 July by CATI and CAWI methods on a group of a 1000 people reveals clear differences in assessment according to political preferences. Among the respondents who positively measure the chances of the fresh minister, 5.9 percent is "decisive" convinced of his better competences, and 30.1% consider it "more".

On the another hand, critics are a number - 11.4 percent of "decisively" do not believe in the better results of Żurek, and 14.9 percent are "perhaps" skeptical. However, the largest group are indecisive, which may indicate that the fresh minister is inactive unrecognizable among the public.

The coalition electors support Lurk

There is clear support for the fresh Minister of Justice among the ruling coalition voters. As much as 67% of this group are affirmative about the prospects of Żurek's work - 16 percent have a "decisive" conviction about his better competences, and 51% are affirmative about it.

Only 11% of the ruling coalition voters have a negative opinion about the future work of the fresh minister. This shows the advanced assurance of this group in the individual decisions made by the current government.

The opposition remains skeptical

There are far more restrained assessments among opposition voters. Only 1 percent think that Żurek will be "decisively" better than Bodnar, while 23 percent measure his chances of "better" positive.

Negative opinions in this group express a full of 38 percent of respondents - 17 percent think that it will be "rather" worse, and 21 percent that "decisively" worse than the predecessor. another opposition voters are besides incapable to clearly measure the future work of the minister.

Undecided Dominate

The results are peculiarly interesting among the remaining voters who do not identify with either the ruling coalition or the opposition. In this group, as many as 74% of the indications are inconclusive, which confirms the general tendency to refrain from assessing the fresh minister.

The United Surveys survey was conducted by CATI's telephone interview and online CAVI. The survey included a typical group of thousands of adult Poles and was carried out on behalf of the Virtual Poland portal.

(PAP) Note: This article was edited with Artificial Intelligence.

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