Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki called Donald Tusk “the prime minister of Polish poverty” and added that unemployment in Poland reached 14.4 percent during his rule.
“Donald Tusk – the prime minister of Polish poverty, and his party are eager to educate Poles in any field in which they turned out to be dangerous people. Dangerous for working Poles, dangerous for Poles. Now they are teaching about unemployment, which reached an alarming 14.4% during their rule!” – Morawiecki wrote on Facebook on Thursday.
“This is a sad reality to which we do not want to return, but we must not forget it, because now the same, dangerous and incompetent people, economic bunglers, want to return to power!” – added.
The Prime Minister emphasized that “Poland, at the time of the Civic Platform, Tusk and Trzaskowski, was experiencing growing unemployment, which according to the Central Statistical Office reached a sad level in February 2013: 2,300,000 of our compatriots were unemployed. This is more than everything. the inhabitants of the Lubelskie Voivodeship”.
“During that time, hundreds of thousands of people had to leave our country in search of work abroad! What’s even worse, in many provinces the percentage was 30%!” – wrote Morawiecki, citing specific data from Piski, Wałbrzych, Nowodworski, Węgorzewo and Lipno districts.
Morawiecki to Tusk: With golden advice I invite you back to Brussels
“Fortunately, everything changed when the Poles chose Law and Justice. Today, we simultaneously have a record number of workers in the Polish economy and record low unemployment, despite the powerful crises raging around us,” said the head of government.
“Also with golden advice, I invite Mr. Donald and his colleagues to come back to Brussels. Your boss Manfred Weber is certainly waiting for such an excellent specialist” – concluded Morawiecki.
The prime minister added a graph to his entry informing him that “unemployment under Tusk reached 14.4 percent.” (GUS data for February 2013).
Source: Do Rzeczy
Roy Brown is a renowned economist and author at The Nation View. He has a deep understanding of the global economy and its intricacies. He writes about a wide range of economic topics, including monetary policy, fiscal policy, international trade, and labor markets.