Nowacka in the Presidential Palace? “I would definitely go on the site of Baśki”
Photo: Paweł Supernak/PAP
Anna Zalewska from PiS did not wait for the finale of her own education reform, because she took part in the elections to the European Parliament and “escaped” to Brussels. – Does Barbara Nowacka intend to escape after the presidential election? – teachers ask now. The current Minister of Education claims that this is “nonsense”. But you can hear many in the parliamentary lobby.
Barbara Nowacka He is one of the most popular Polish politicians on the portal X (formerly Twitter) – over 205,000 users observe it there. Nowacka is active, although she more often gives someone else's entries than she publishes her own. Someone who would not know what he does on a daily basis would rather not guess in recent weeks that Nowacka is the minister of education.
Between 1 and 24 March she published 97 entries. Only 11 were devoted to education. And although this is the second in popularity topic that the politician dealt with, he is very far from the first.
62 Entries on Barbara Nowacka's account concerned Rafał Trzaskowski. When we enter her profile, we will see a photo of the candidate and the slogan: “All Poland ahead!”.
And Nowacka's involvement in the election campaign is above average. The Minister of Education goes around the country and smiles at photos of the Civic Coalition candidate for president. Only in recent weeks was, among others in Zielona Góra and Gdańsk. He usually bakes two baking on one stone – for example, in the morning he meets students, and in the evening listens to Trzaskowski in the first place. When she can't go somewhere herself, she gladly shows Trzaskowski's relations in his social media.
It is not surprising that one of the hotter political questions is whether if the president of Warsaw wins the election and move to the Presidential Palace, Nowacka will follow him? And if so, who will be the new minister or minister of education?
Summer in the sweatshirt
Talks with politicians and politicians often go according to a simple principle: the questions have the most to say when they can remain anonymous. And when the separation of positions and building political careers is involved, the interlocutors become extremely abstineed.
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