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Donald Tusk, leader of the Civic Platform party (PO),
celebrates his general elections victory over Poland's Law and Justice
Party of Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski in Warsaw Oct. 21, 2007.
(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo
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WARSAW, Oct. 21 (Xinhua) -- The Civic Platform party
(PO), Poland's largest opposition party, won a broad lead over the ruling
right-wing Law and Justice Party (PiS) in Sunday's early parliamentary
elections, according to several exit polls.
The exit polls by Polish national television TVP and
the Republic daily showed the PO won 43.7 percent of ballots and the PiS 30.4
percent, which can be translated into 224 and 156 seats respectively in the
Sejm, the lower house of Parliament.
The bicameral Polish Parliament is composed of the
Sejm (the Lower House) and the Senate, holding 460 and 100 seats respectively,
with a four-year term each.
Another exit poll by private television station TVN24
indicated similar results, with the PO wining 44.2 percent and the PiS 31.3
percent.
The polls also showed the Polish Peasants' Party and
the Left and Democrats League would gather enough votes to enter the new
parliament, while the League of Polish Families (LPR) and the Self-Defense Party
failed to get 5 percent of ballots, losing access to parliament.
The voting, which had been expected to end at 20:00
(1800 GMT), concluded at 22:55 local time (2055 GMT) Sunday due to the shortage
of ballots in one polling station in Warsaw. Official results would not be
available until Tuesday.
More than 30 million Poles registered to cast their
votes. The exit polls showed a strong turnout of over 50 percent, which set anew
record for the last 14 years in parliamentary elections.
The current Polish parliament was elected in October
2005 when the PiS, the largest party in parliament, came into power. In May
2006, the PiS formed a coalition with the LPR and Self-Defense Party, but the
three-party coalition collapsed in August this yeardue to differences on both
domestic and foreign affairs.
On Sept. 7 of this year Poland's Sejm approved a
self-dissolution motion, paving the way for early parliamentary
elections.