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Theacting president of the Republic of Poland (Polish:pełniący obowiązki prezydenta Rzeczpospolitej Polskiej, orp.o. prezydenta RP) is a temporary post provided for by thePolish Constitution.
The constitution states that thepresident is the head of state. If the president dies in office, resigns, is removed from office or unable to execute their powers and duties, a predetermined person will assume the powers and duties as acting president.
In the incapacity scenario, the acting president is just a temporary deputy. In the case of a vacancy, however, they become the head of state until the next election, albeit without the title of president, and retaining their previous office. In either case, all the powers of the president devolve to the acting president, with the exception of the right to dissolve theParliament.
The first person in line to become acting president is theMarshal of theSejm. Should they be unable to serve, the next is theMarshal of theSenate. This order of precedence has been in effect since the creation of the Office of President, with the exception of the period 1935–1939, when the order was reversed.
To date four people have served as acting president:Maciej Rataj who did so twice,Bronisław Komorowski,Bogdan Borusewicz, andGrzegorz Schetyna. Rataj, Komorowski, and Schetyna were Marshals of the Sejm, and Borusewicz the Speaker of the Senate. Rataj's first term was between the assassination of PresidentGabriel Narutowicz and the election ofStanisław Wojciechowski, December 16–22, 1922, the second between the resignation of Wojciechowski and the election ofIgnacy Mościcki, May 15–June 4, 1926. Both times he appointed a newcabinet. Komorowski became acting president on April 10, 2010, following the death of PresidentLech Kaczyński ina plane crash.[1] On July 8, 2010, Poland had three different acting presidents. Komorowski (having won the new presidential elections) resigned as Speaker of the Sejm in the morning, and Borusewicz, who served as the Marshal of the Senate took over as acting president for several hours, until Schetyna was confirmed as the new Speaker of the Sejm and the new acting president.
Duringthe period of communist rule, two Sejm Marshals served very briefly asPresidentspro tempore of theState National Council:
Article 131, Chapter 5: