Feb 9, 2026 | Law, Politics
Notes from Poland is run by a small editorial team and is published by an independent, non-profit foundation that is funded through donations from our readers. We cannot do what we do without your support.
Robert Bąkiewicz, a prominent nationalist leader with ties to the opposition Law and Justice (PiS) party, has been charged by prosecutors with three alleged crimes, including inciting the murder of Prime Minister Donald Tusk.
Bąkiewicz denies the accusations, saying that his words have been deliberately misrepresented as part of a political prosecution aimed against him.
Zarzuty https://t.co/u7A8hLeuyb. nawoływania do popełnienia zbrodni dla Roberta Bąkiewiczahttps://t.co/rDSr0gyaUX
- Prokuratura Regionalna w Warszawie (@Prok_Regio_Waw) February 9, 2026
On Monday, prosecutors in Warsaw announced the charges, all of which relate to a speech Bąkiewicz gave in Warsaw last October during a march organised by the national-conservative PiS to protest against EU migration policy.
During the address, Bąkiewicz criticised Tusk, accusing him of pursuing a harmful immigration policy and of being subservient to German interests..
Prosecutors argue that some of the rhetoric used by Bąkiewicz constitutes incitement to violence against Tusk, including a call to ?pull out the weeds with the use of napalm?.
Bąkiewicz also said ?the enemy must be finished off, when he?s swaying in the ring, he is beaten until he lies on the boards? and ?don?t just wait for politicians [to act], you have to take up this scythe yourselves?.
pic.twitter.com/eETMdmecr7 Publiczne nawoływanie do zabójstwa, podżeganie do przestępstw z nienawiści, znieważenie organu konstytucyjnego. Podejrzany Robert #Bąkiewicz usłyszał zarzuty popełnienia 3 czynów zabronionych, z których każdy zagrożone jest karą pozbawienia wolności.…
- e-wrzosek #FBPE🇪🇺🇵🇱🏳️🌈#FundamentalRights (@e_wrzosek) February 9, 2026
As well as being charged with public incitement to commit a crime, which carries a prison sentence of up to three years, Bąkiewicz, who stood as a PiS parliamentary candidate in 2023, is also accused of insulting a public official for calling Tusk a ?traitor?, ?German footstool?, ?German stooge?, ?coward? and ?weed?.
Poland has a range of laws criminalising insult against various officials and institutions, which have been regularly used, including when PiS was in power between 2015 and 2023.
Finally, Bąkiewicz is accused of inciting hatred based on national, ethnic and religious differences due to his remarks regarding Germans and immigrants. That offence also carries a potential prison sentence of up to three years.
Bąkiewicz, who is the leader of a self-declared Border Defence Movement that has sought to stop Germany from returning migrants to Poland, today attended the regional prosecutor?s office in Warsaw to hear the charges and declare himself not guilty.
Speaking afterwards to supporters, he said that the charges against him are a violation of his constitutional right to free speech and part of a ?political circus?. Bąkiewicz also claimed that he had not even been referring to Tusk in the parts of the speech interpreted by prosecutors as a threat.
?If anyone listened to my speech, I was talking about the system, not the people,? Bąkiewicz later told broadcaster Radio Maryja. ?I don?t think I even mentioned Donald Tusk by name.?
He also noted that Tusk himself had, in 2021, quoted a poem about using a ?rope and a branch? against ?authorities who raise their hand against the nation? in reference to PiS-aligned President Andrzej Duda. Tusk subsequently faced no action from prosecutors, who Bąkiewicz said have double standards.
Skoro za „chwasty” są zarzuty, to podsyłam pani Prokurator Wiśniewskiej materiał poglądowy.
Pani Prokurator, tak szczerze, która metafora jest bliższa Pani sercu?
A Tobie, Tusku przypominam Twój ulubiony cytat Czesława Miłosza, w którym poeta powiedział, co czeka tych, którzy… pic.twitter.com/MKWF27qTgG
- Robert Bąkiewicz (@RBakiewicz) February 9, 2026
Bąkiewicz has a history of making inflammatory statements aimed those he perceives as enemies of Poland. In 2019, when he was the main organisers of the annual nationalist Independence March in Warsaw, he called for “LGBT totalitarianism” to be “fought with fire, literally with fire”.
During mass protests against the tightening of the abortion law in 2020, he formed a self-declared ?Catholic self-defence force?, promising to ?crush and destroy? those threatening churches.
He was later convicted of a ?hooligan act? after he and his followers physically removed a female protester from in front of a church during those protests. Last year, in one of his final acts in office, President Duda partially pardoned Bąkiewicz of that conviction.
Last month, in a separate case, prosecutors filed an indictment against Bąkiewicz on various criminal charges relating to his Border Defence Movement, including insulting Polish border officers and inciting hatred against Germans and immigrants
The leader of a movement that emerged last year to patrol the German border and prevent returns of illegal migrants to Poland will face trial.
Prosecutors accuse him of insulting Polish border officers and inciting hatred against Germans and immigrants https://t.co/PTraij9nzL
- Notes from Poland 🇵🇱 (@notesfrompoland) January 2, 2026
Notes from Poland is run by a small editorial team and published by an independent, non-profit foundation that is funded through donations from our readers. We cannot do what we do without your support.
Main Image credit: Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation/Wikimedia Commons (under CC BY 4.0)
Daniel Tilles is editor-in-chief of Notes from Poland. He has written on Polish affairs for a wide range of publications, including Foreign Policy, POLITICO Europe, EUobserver and Dziennik Gazeta Prawna.
Latest news Russia accuses Poland of involvement in assassination attempt on general in Moscow Defence, News
Poland has not yet commented on the claims, which were presented without evidence.
News, Notes from Pawland
The project was funded as part of the city?s ?citizens? budget?, in which residents can propose and vote for projects to be implemented with municipal funds.
But Russians, Belarusians and Roma remain the most disliked national and ethnic groups in Poland.
Feb 3, 2026 | Defence, Hot news, Law, News, Politics
The government wants to look into Epstein?s possible Polish victims and links to Russia.
Feb 3, 2026 | Hot news, News, Society
In 2023, 53% of Poles aged 25-34 lived with their parents, eight percentage points more than in 2018.
Feb 2, 2026 | Defence, Hot news, News, Politics, Society
It follows a number of other recent surveys indicating that attitudes towards the US have worsened in Poland under Donald Trump.
We are an independent, nonprofit media outlet, funded through the support of our readers.
If you appreciate the work we do, please consider helping us to continue and expand it.
Chocimska 7 / 830-057 Kraków, PolandNIP: 677 243 97 04KRS: 0000758506
tags below to include what ever you wish in your footer. Copy and paste image html source code from your text editor to include images of things like payment options etc -- Copyright © 2026 Notes From Poland | Design jurko studio | Code by 2sides.pl
Agnieszka Wądołowska is managing editor of Notes from Poland. She has previously worked for Gazeta.pl and Tokfm.pl and contributed to Gazeta Wyborcza, Wysokie Obcasy, Duży Format, Midrasz and Kultura Liberalna?
ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR
contributing editorial assistant
Weronika Strzyżyńska is currently studying journalism at Goldsmiths as a Scott Trust Bursary recipient. She has written on issues immigration and Brexit for New Statesman and Prospect
ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR
ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR
advisory board member
Associate Professor at the Institute of Political Studies of the Polish Academy of Science, member of the Polish parliaments
ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR
advisory board member
Executive Director of Taube Family Foundation
ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR
advisory board member
Senior Research Fellow at the Global Europe Centre, University of Kent.
ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR
advisory board member
Professor at the Institute of History of the Jagiellonian University
ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR
advisory board member
Professor of European Studies at Oxford University
ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR
advisory board member
ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR
advisory board member
ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR × Ben Koschalka assistant editor
ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR
ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR
founder, editor-at-large
Stanley Bill is the founder and editor-at-large of Notes from Poland.He is also Senior Lecturer in Polish Studies and Director of the Polish Studies Programme at the University of Cambridge, where he works on Polish culture, politics and history.
Stanley has spent more than ten years living in Poland, mostly based in Kraków and Bielsko-Biała. He founded Notes from Poland in 2014 as a blog dedicated to personal impressions, cultural analysis and political commentary. He is committed to the promotion of deeper knowledge and understanding of Poland.
He is the Chair of the Board of the Notes from Poland Foundation.
ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR
Daniel Tilles is editor-in-chief of Notes from Poland and assistant professor of history at the Pedagogical University of Krakow. He has written on Polish affairs for a wide range of publications, including Foreign Policy, POLITICO Europe, The Independent and Dziennik Gazeta Prawna.
ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR
Comments
No comments yet.
Log in to leave a comment.