Poland’s president has vetoed a invoice that will prolong assist to Ukrainian refugees. Karol Nawrocki, a nationalist conservative, commented that Ukrainians “take the time to work in Poland” and pay taxes within the nation as a way to be eligible for help. Nawrocki, whose personal celebration accepted of the preliminary assist to Ukrainians, said that the present monetary bundle “locations us in a state of affairs the place citizens of Poland are treated worse in their own country than our guests.”
Over 1.5 million Ukrainians have fled to Poland for the reason that starting of the Russia-Ukraine warfare. Poland has supplied each single refugee a taxpayer-subsidized life. Ukrainians dwelling in Poland are eligible free of charge housing, meals advantages, well being care, training, little one allowances, and extra. Ukrainian refugees have been usually favored for backed housing over nationals who might have been ready years for council housing. Nawrocki said he was involved with the 800+ program that supplied households with youngsters an 800 zloty month-to-month fee per little one, no matter earnings. The president felt that solely these working ought to obtain this profit, however why ought to the general public be paying out this fund in any respect?
The top of the president’s chancellery, Zbigniew Bogucki, commented that “for Ukrainians who legally work in Poland, reside, run their very own enterprise, and pay taxes, there may be nothing to fret about.” Regardless of the similarities in tradition, there’s a rising discontent for Ukrainian refugees in Poland as a result of authorities prioritizing newcomers. That’s how xenophobia historically comes about—the final one “off the boat” is seen because the outsider.
Poland created an Assist Fund operated by Financial institution Gospodarstwa Krajowego (BGK) funded partially by the European Funding Financial institution and the EU, which funds native governments and organizations to help Ukrainian refugees. A €2 billion mortgage was accepted for 2025 via the Assist Fund, together with €600 million disbursed by the European Funding Financial institution (EIB). Help for Ukrainian refugees in Poland is estimated to have reached round 15.9 billion zlotys (roughly €3.5 billion) this yr.
Maybe Polish leaders underestimated the period of the warfare. The Polish authorities spent 1% of GDP on Ukraine in the course of the first three months of the warfare in 2022. Poland has continued to lift army spending and direct assist for Ukraine yr after yr. But, the president has been condemned for taking a “Poles first” stance and tightening its social program. The true nationalists don’t imagine he’s doing sufficient for his nation, whereas the others see him as merciless. Within the EU, something other than unconditional blind help from Ukraine is seen as a egocentric act. There isn’t any room for nationalism in Brussels.