With all the ballots counted, Duda had 51.03 percent of the vote, while opposition-backed challenger Rafał Trzaskowski, the mayor of Warsaw, had 48.97 percent, the National Electoral Commission (PKW) said.
It added that Duda garnered a total of 10,440,648 votes, while Trzaskowski won 10,018,263.
Voter turnout in Sunday's runoff was 68.18 percent, up from 64.51 percent in the first round of voting two weeks earlier, according to the National Electoral Commission.
Members of Poland's National Electoral Commission (PKW). Photo: PAP/Mateusz Marek
Poland’s governing conservatives last fall won parliamentary elections for a second consecutive term, and have now consolidated their grip on power by maintaining control of the presidency.
The Polish president has the power to veto legislation passed by parliament, a key prerogative in a country where traditionalists and liberals are bitterly divided.
In the first round of voting in the presidential ballot on June 28, no candidate won an outright majority, meaning a second round had to be held.
Duda won the most votes last month, garnering 43.5 percent, while Trzaskowski was runner-up with 30.46 percent, according to the National Electoral Commission.
‘Long live Poland!’
“Long live Poland!” chanted a jubilant Duda as supporters around him erupted in cheers on election night.
“I promise I won’t disappoint you,” he added, thanking his wife Agata and daughter Kinga and the conservative government which backed him in the presidential race.
Andrzej Duda (centre) with wife Agata (left) and daughter Kinga (right). Photo: PAP/Leszek Szymański
Duda said the election campaign had been “brutal,” but called on opponents to show each other respect amid Poland’s bitter political divisions. He invited his challenger to shake hands at the presidential palace.
Trzaskowski did not concede defeat on election night but said he was waiting for the official results to come through.
“We said it would be close and it is close,” he told supporters.
Rafał Trzaskowski with family on election night. Photo: PAP/Radek Pietruszka
Ahead of the vote, conservatives had warned that if Trzaskowski, the candidate of the opposition Civic Platform (PO) party, was elected head of state, he would block a swathe of government initiatives, hampering the administration’s ability to push through core policies.
Photo: PAP/Leszek Szymański
The Polish presidential election was originally scheduled for May 10, but failed to go ahead amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
(pk-gs)
Source: Polish Radio/TVP