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  • Support for Poland's governing conservatives has fallen following a near-total abortion ban that has inspired consecutive days of mass protests nationwide, a survey showed on Monday. In power since 2015 and re-elected last year, the Law and Justice (PiS) party saw its backing plunge by almost 10 percentage points last month, according to the poll. Just 30.9 percent of respondents now say they support the PiS compared to 40.5 percent two weeks ago, according to a survey with 1,000 respondents carried out for the Dziennik Gazeta Prawna daily and RMF FM radio. The liberal opposition Civic Coalition (KO) saw a slight uptick in support, winning the backing of 25.3 percent of respondents surveyed Saturday, against 23.3 percent in the previous poll. Ranked third is the new centrist movement Poland 2050, which received 14.7 percent, up from its previous 9.3 percent. According to another opinion survey carried out for the Rzeczpospolita daily, more than 70 percent of Poles would like Jaroslaw Kaczynski to step down from his position as PiS leader. Formally deputy premier in charge of security, the 71-year-old is seen as Poland's true powerbroker. Analysts believe Kaczynski is behind the October 22 Constitutional Court ruling which would allow abortions only in cases of rape, incest and when the mother's life is at risk. Until then, terminations had also been allowed in instances of severe foetal anomalies, but the court ruled that was "incompatible" with the constitution. Defying government orders against mass gatherings during the pandemic, hundreds of thousands of people nationwide have been risking coronavirus contagion to voice their anger at the court ruling. Some 100,000 people protested in Warsaw on Friday alone, according to city hall. And on Monday, demonstrators again blocked key roads in a number of cities, including Warsaw, Lodz, Poznan and Bydgoszcz. On Sunday, the pro-choice activists behind the demonstrations announced their demands for the government, including abortion and LGBT rights, as well as an end to public funding for the Church. The EU member of 38 million people sees fewer than 2,000 legal abortions every year, according to official statistics. Women's groups estimate that an additional 200,000 women abort either illegally or abroad. bo-amj/spm
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  • Abortion fight erodes support for Polish right wing: poll
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