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Waldemar Pawlak is the only person to serve twice as Prime Minister of the Republic of Poland during Third Republic period (1989-present)[1].
His first premiership (June 5 - July 7, 1992) was the briefest Government during this period, lasted only 33 days[2]. This was, however, notable period, known commonly as Pawlak's 33 days (33 dni Pawlaka)[3].
After downfall of Jan Olszewski's cabinet, Pawlak, a leader of the agrarian Polish People's Party, was named new Prime Minister by President Lech Wałęsa with mission, to form a new coalition government included agrarians, christian democrats and liberals[4].
However, Pawlak government failed to gain a support from Sejm majority and failed in vote of confidence. He resigned and President replaced him by Hanna Suchocka, who won support from majority.
Pawlak's first premiership and his role was and is widely viewed as caretaker administration, to give a new coalition time to form next government, after political disturbance after fall of the Olszewski government[5].
Because cabinet did not recevied support from Sejm, at this time Pawlak had no official ministers, only temporary chiefs of executive branches[6].
Pawlak returned to Prime Minister office in 1995, this time as a head of the agrarian-socialists PSL-SLD coalition. He served from 1993 to 1995.
[edit] Pawlak's 1st government
- Waldemar Pawlak - Prime Minister
- Andrzej Milczanowski -Acting Minister of Internal Affairs
- Aleksander Łuczak - Acting Chief of the PM's chancellery
[edit] References
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List of Polish Cabinets |
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PMs of the Duchy of
Warsaw (1807-1813) |
Stanisław Małachowski • Stanisław Małachowski • Ludwik Szymon Gutakowski • Stanisław Kostka Potocki
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PMs of the Kingdom of
Poland (1916-1918) |
Jan Kucharzewski • Antoni Ponikowski • Jan Kanty Steczkowski • Józef Świerzyński • Władysław Wróblewski
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PM of the Polish Republic
(Lublin) (1918) |
Ignacy Daszyński
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PMs of the Second Polish
Republic (1918-1939) |
Jędrzej Moraczewski • Ignacy Jan Paderewski • Leopold Skulski • Władysław Grabski (1) • Wincenty Witos (1) • Antoni Ponikowski (1) • Antoni Ponikowski (2) • Artur Śliwiński • Julian Nowak • Władysław Sikorski (1) • Wincenty Witos (2) • Władysław Grabski (2) • Aleksander Skrzyński • Wincenty Witos (3) • Kazimierz Bartel (1) • Kazimierz Bartel (2) • Kazimierz Bartel (3) • Józef Piłsudski (1) • Kazimierz Bartel (4) • Kazimierz Świtalski • Kazimierz Bartel (5) • Walery Sławek (1) • Józef Piłsudski (2) • Walery Sławek (2) • Aleksander Prystor • Janusz Jędrzejewicz • Leon Kozłowski • Walery Sławek (3) • Marian Zyndram-Kościałkowski • Felicjan Sławoj Składkowski
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PMs of the Polish
Government in Exile
(1939-1990) |
Władysław Sikorski (2) • Władysław Sikorski (3) • Stanisław Mikołajczyk • Tomasz Arciszewski • Tadeusz Komorowski • Tadeusz Tomaszewski • Roman Odzierzyński • Jerzy Hryniewski • Stanisław Mackiewicz • Hugon Hanke • Antoni Pająk (1) • Antoni Pająk (2) • Aleksander Zawisza (1) • Aleksander Zawisza (2) • Aleksander Zawisza (3) • Zygmunt Muchniewski • Alfred Urbański (1) • Alfred Urbański (2) • Kazimierz Sabbat (1) • Kazimierz Sabbat (2) • Kazimierz Sabbat (3) • Kazimierz Sabbat (4) • Edward Szczepanik (1) • Edward Szczepanik (2)
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PMs of Free Poland
in Exile (1972-1990) |
Sergiusz Ursyn-Szantyr • Zenon Janasiak • Ryszard Józef Zawisza • Stanisław Zięba • Jan Zygmunt Sobolewski • Jan Libront • Jan Alfred Chanerley-Łokcikowski
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PMs of the Polish People's
Republic (1944-1989) |
Edward Osóbka-Morawski (1) • Edward Osóbka-Morawski (2) • Edward Osóbka-Morawski (3) • Józef Cyrankiewicz (1) • Bolesław Bierut • Józef Cyrankiewicz (2) • Józef Cyrankiewicz (3) • Józef Cyrankiewicz (4) • Józef Cyrankiewicz (5) • Piotr Jaroszewicz (1) • Piotr Jaroszewicz (2) • Edward Babiuch • Józef Pińkowski • Wojciech Jaruzelski • Zbigniew Messner • Mieczysław Rakowski • Czesław Kiszczak • Tadeusz Mazowiecki
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PMs of the Third Polish
Republic (1989-) |
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