Sejm (lower house) votes as of 100% votes counted):
- Prawo i Sprawiedliwość (Right) - 35,38%
- Koalicja Obywatelska (Centre) - 30,70%
- Trzecia Droga (Centre-Right) - 14,40%
- Nowa Lewica (Centre-Left) - 8,61%
- Konfederacja (Far Right) - 7,16%
Up to date results: https://wybory.gov.pl/sejmsenat2023/pl/sejm/wynik/pl
Sejm (lower house) seats as of 100% votes counted:
- Prawo i Sprawiedliwość (Right) - 194
- Koalicja Obywatelska (Centre) - 157
- Trzecia Droga (Centre-Right) - 65
- Nowa Lewica (Centre-Left) - 26
- Konfederacja (Far Right) - 18
Democratic opposition gets 248/460 seats, safe majority but not enough to counter presidential veto.
D’Hondt calculator via: https://danieljanus.pl/wybory2023/
Senat (upper house) as of 100% votes counted:
- Senate pact*: 66
- PiS: 34
* First past the post system is used in the upper house elections. Senate pact is an informal coalition of all democratic opposition parties where they agree on a single candidate per voting district.
Here’s a map of votes for PiS from poles abroad - low in most of europe and especially in far-east, but what happened across the atlantic ?
Polish diaspora in the US is very weird, there’s what you could almost call a fetishization of Polish stereotypes. Think of an anime fan but with pope, pierogi and kiełbasa. PiS emphasizes tradition in their image so they score points with these people. Results from the US are actually rather bad compared to historical ones.
I’m guessing that the US’ Polish diaspora would have a greater proportion of Poles who fled Communism and their descendants, and thus lean rightward (see also: Cubans in Miami), whereas the European Polish diaspora would be mostly economic migrants from after the fall of the Berlin Wall.