Popular National Union
Związek Ludowo-Narodowy was a Polish political party aligned with the National Democracy political movement during the Second Polish Republic, gathering together right-wing politicians with conservative and nationalist opinions.
Between 1919 and 1926 the ZLN achieved considerable electoral success but at no point governed alone. It could only supply individual, well-qualified ministers to successive governments after 1923 in cooperation with the National Democrats and the peasants' party. In the 1922 presidential elections the ZLN nominated count Maurycy Zamoyski to counter the centrist "freemason" Gabriel Narutowicz as well as the socialist Stanisław Wojciechowski from the PSL “Piast”.
After the May Coup of 1926, the ZLN gradually lost its influence and power in the wake of internal schisms and conflicts under the rule of its rivals, the Sanacja regime. In 1928 the ZLN morphed into the National Party.
Genesis
The ZLN origins as a political party lay in the postwar Europe of late 1918. In December of that year and shortly before the elections, an alliance arose known as the "National Election Committee of Democratic Parties" composed of the following: National Democracy ; National Unity ; the Christian Workers' Party ; and the Polish Progressive Party ". Wojciech Korfanty became the president of this grouping with Stanisław Grabski, Konstanty Kowalewski and Józef Teodorowicz as vice-presidents. In February 1919 this alliance morphed into the National Parliamentary Popular Union.Beginnings
The ZLN was established in May 1919 at the 1st Congress of the National Popular Union. At the beginning, the ZLN was a federation of political parties, but the summer of 1919 saw the departure of the Christian-National Workers Club from its ranks. This split greatly homogenized the character of the ZLN, a change evident by its second congress conference in October 1919.In January 1919, a group of National Democrats attempted a coup d’état to bring down the leftist government of Jędrzej Moraczewski. The ZLN's Marian Januszajtis-Żegota and Eustachy Sapieha participated in this unsuccessful attempt.
On 16 January 1919, a non-aligned government arose with the cooperation of ZLN members Władysław Seyda as Minister of the “Prussian” District, Józef Englich in finance, and Reverend Antoni Stychel as Deputy Speaker of Parliament. When the situation at the front of the Polish-Soviet War became critical in spring 1920, the ZLN were prominent in their vocal criticism of Piłsudski and soon inspired the creation of the Council of National Defense with Roman Dmowski.
At the time, the ZLN’s political manifesto could be summarized in a few points:
- * Nationalism
- * Unity of the nation
- * Elimination of class divisions
- * Germany as the main threat to Poland
- * A policy of restraint towards expansion in the East
- * Support for a private-capitalist economy, objection to government interference
- * Support for worker’s insurance and land reform, but opposition to coercive land redistribution
- * Continuation of Polish national traditions
- * The significant position of the Roman Catholic Church
- * A strong parliament and a reduction of the powers of the President
From the second half of 1921 and into 1922, the ZLN opposed the Chief of State as well as the centrist political parties. Before the elections in 1922, the rightist Christian National Union included the Popular-National Union, the National Workers Party, the Polish Christian-Democratic Party and the National Christian Peasant Party. It won 98 seats in the Sejm and 29 seats in the Senate.
Later that same year, a nominee of the National Democrats, Maurycy Zamoyski, was defeated by Gabriel Narutowicz in a runoff fifth round of voting in parliament. Narutowicz would be assassinated a few days after his election by a fanatical ultra-nationalist painter, Eligiusz Niewiadomski.
1923-1928
On 17 May 1923, the Lanckorona Pact saw representatives of the ZLN, the Christian-National Labour Party, and PSL “Piast” agreeing to a broad set of philosophical and operational principals, including: Polish social policy towards the Eastern borderlands, the assignment of governmental portfolios exclusively to Poles, and joint policies against the political left. The effect of this agreement was the so-called Chjeno-Piast government created on 28 May 1923. It was headed by Witos on the ZLN’s behalf. This ministry also included Stanisław Głąbiński, Marian Seyda and Wojciech Korfanty.Program
ZLN foreign policy was pro-French and anti-German. In the East, ideas were presented for the full incorporation of Western Ukraine, Western Belarus, and the Wilno region into Poland. From the ZLN's point of view non-Poles in the Republic were considered second-class citizens up to the moment they underwent linguistic and cultural assimilation.Support for the ZLN was comprised in the main by:
- * city dwellers
- * workers from Łódź
- * landed gentry
On 26 October 1924, the fourth ZLN Congress proposed a program on the future development of the party, which led to a marked increase in discipline within the party apparatus. A "Supreme Council" with Stanisław Głąbiński as president and a Board of Directors numbering 30 emerged from the reorganization. Workmen and country departments were created in order to increase membership. Communist were to be banned from holding elected office once the ZLN gained power.
From November 1923, Prime Minister Grabski tried to come to a political understanding with representatives of national minorities in Poland; this created conflicts within the government. On 13 November 1925, the Grabski government collapsed and was replaced by the administration of Aleksander Skrzyński with representatives of the ZLN, the Christian Democrats, the National Workers Party, the PSL “Piast”, and the Polish Socialist Party. Jerzy Zdziechowski in Finance and Stanisław Grabski as the Minister of Religion and Education represented the ZLN in this government.
In 1925, the ZLN declared that only Poles who are Christians and who accept the party's program, statute, regulations, and resolutions can become members. On 10 May 1926, the third Witos government was created, in which Zdziechowski and Grabski again took part. This government would be overthrown by Józef Piłsudski's May Coup. From 1926, in response and in opposition Piłsudski’s political movement, a "Union of Polish Nationalists" was postulated. However, some within the movement were becoming more and more radical, influenced by the European fascist movement. On 4 December 1926, the Camp of Great Poland appeared. Its founders’ intention was to take the place of the ZLN. On 7 October 1928, the ZLN dissolved itself in the wake of repressions from the Sanacja regime and was replaced by the National Party.
Structure
The regional structure of the party consisted of:- * regional administrations,
- * district boards electing district administrations,
- * rural and urban units with a president or a board headed by a president.
Newspapers that presented similar values as the ZLN were Gazeta Warszawska, Przegląd Narodowy, Gazeta Poranna, Myśl Narodowa, and Słowo Polskie.