Kaczmarek warned repeatedly that unless a parliamentary committee of inquiry is appointed to investigate alleged abuse of power by the services, it is precisely the services that may determine the outcome of the elections.
It is not Kaczmarek who has first said this, and it is not only him who is calling for the appointment, during this parliament, of committees of inquiry into the actions of the Central Anticorruption Bureau (CBA) and the circumstances of
Barbara Blida's death. The difference is that the former minister of the interior knows, like few others, what he is talking about. Crown witnesses are seldom credible because they used to be gangsters themselves. But no one knows as much as they do.
Kaczmarek says that only a committee of inquiry can prevent further provocations on the part of the services. On this score, he should sound credibly to all those who are still in doubt which should come first - the elections, or the committee.
The Sejm convenes tomorrow and though the opposition's capability to ensure that a committee of inquiry is appointed quickly is limited, it should do everything it can in this regard. As a point of principle, and for its own safety.
Let's finally bury the IV RP, and let Janusz Kaczmarek be its Józef Światło. Then we will proceed to elect the new parliament.