WARSAW, Poland — Warsaw Mayor Rafał Trzaskowski has been selected by Prime Minister Donald Tusk's centrist Civic Coalition as its candidate in next year's presidential election, beating out Foreign Minister Radek Sikorski.
Tusk announced the decision at a party gathering on Saturday, a day after more than 22,000 party members voted in a primary to select who should run to replace the incumbent, Andrzej Duda.
Tusk said Trzaskowski won nearly 75% of the votes, and Sikorski slightly over 25%.
Political observers in Poland say Tusk's pro-European Union party has already put itself in a strong position ahead of the presidential election by showing that it had two strong candidates, generating a buzz around them and allowing party members to choose in a democratic process.
''We are responsible people, we are responsible for the fate of our homeland today,'' Tusk told supporters at the party event. He said it was only the start of what is expected to be a difficult campaign.
The primary process distinguishes Tusk's party from its main rival, the national conservative Law and Justice party, known by its acronym PiS, whose candidate will be handpicked by leader Jarosław Kaczyński. The candidate is expected to be announced at a party convention in Krakow on Sunday.
''In PiS, one vote matters, while we value every vote, and that's how we differ,'' Trzaskowski told party members in his acceptance speech. ''I'm convinced that we're coming out of this primary stronger, we're all stronger, and I have a very strong mandate and a lot of energy, determination and courage to beat PiS.''
Sikorski congratulated Trzaskowski and promised his support.