Gazeta Polska was an important newspaper in the interwar Poland, published from 1929 to 1939 in Warsaw.
It had a strong pro-Sanation bias and was seen as a semi-official news outlet of the Sanation-dominated Polish government of the second half of the 1930s.
[1] Within Sanation politics, Gazeta Polska supported "the colonels" and later, Edward Rydz-Śmigły.
Its successive editors-in-chief were Adam Koc (1929–1931), Bogusław Miedziński (1931–1938) and Mieczysław Starzyński (1938–1939).
In his correspondence, Winston Churchill criticized the paper for becoming one of the victims of the 1934 German–Polish Press Agreement, which prohibited the publication of material that might be "prejudicial to good relations between the two countries.