Bezpartyjni Samorządowcy

[4] Bezpartyjni Samorządowcy frequently acts as a minor partner of regional governing coalitions, such as in the voivodeships of Lubuskie and Lower Silesia.

[3] The party also advocates for creation of a powerful ecological agency based on the American United States Fish and Wildlife Service, which would protect nature and its resources, prevent pollution environment and combat poaching and illegal hunting.

[5] In 2009, the movement changed its name to "Civic Lower Silesia", and in 2014 Raczyński and Dutkiewicz parted ways, with the former founding Bezpartyjni Samorządowcy the same year.

It won four seats in the Lower Silesian Voivodeship Sejmik, which were given to: Paweł Kukiz, Robert Raczyński, Aldona Wiktorska-Święcka and Patryk Wild.

The BS committee fielded two candidates for mayor (Aldona Wiktorska-Święcka in Wrocław and Wiesław Gierus in Jelenia Góra), but they did not enter the second round.

In addition to Robert Raczyński, Piotr Roman in Bolesławiec, who was running from his own committee, remained the mayor of the city from among the BS-related candidates.

In mid-July, however, the BS milieu ended its cooperation with Paweł Kukiz and, together with non-partisan local government activists from other regions and the Civic Movement for Single-Mandate Electoral Districts (also previously supporting Paweł Kukiz) set up the JOW Bezpartyjni committee, which registered candidates in only a few electoral districts (among the signatories of the initiative's programme declaration were BS representatives Robert Raczyński, Piotr Roman, Patryk Wild and Tymoteusz Myrda).

[13] Senator Jarosław Obremski, who was associated with this group, set up his own committee and successfully ran for re-election (he was supported by, among others, PiS and Polska Razem).

In addition, other councillors from this party - Michał Bobowiec, vice-chairman of the local assembly Julian Golak, Czesław Kręcichwost, Ryszard Lech and voivodship Marshal Cezary Przybylski - left PO.

Together with three councillors elected from BS lists (Tymoteusz Myrda, Patryk Wild and Ewa Zdrojewska), as well as another non-aligned councillor Kazimierz Janik (elected from the SLD Lewica Razem list), they established the club Bezpartyjni Samorządowcy, which became the largest club in the assembly and, in coalition with the Polish People's Party, took over power in the voivodeship, ousting PO from it.

[15][16] On 27 June 2016 there was an expansion of the governing coalition, with Civic Platform and the Democratic Left Alliance (which had been in a joint councillors' club with the PSL for some time).

[24] On the other hand, in the Opolskie Voivodeship, the BS, as part of an agreement with the local association Przyjazny Samorząd Powiatu Namysłowskiego,[25] registered one list in the assembly elections (thus gaining the rights of a nationwide committee).

They did not enter the Voivodeship Assembly, but supported Marshal Olgierd Geblewicz from the Civic Platform, and their representative Maria Ilnicka-Mądry became the chairwoman of the Sejmik.

Bezpartyjni Samorządowcy declared to run independently in the 2019 Polish parliamentary election (after the PSL and Kukiz'15 failed to agree on a joint start with them).

Candidates for the Senate included the leader of RO na rzecz JOW Patryk Hałaczkiewicz, or Świętokrzyskie academics - political scientist Kazimierz Kik and former policeman Dariusz Loranty.

[34] Non-partisans from the Lubuskie Voivodeship, however, joined the Polish Coalition, and as a result, Łukasz Mejza (formerly active in Poland Fair Play) found himself in the Sejm elections in last place on the PSL list there.

KWW KBiS received 0.78% of the vote in the elections to the Sejm (taking 6th place, as the strongest non-national committee), exceeding 3% in the Wrocław and Wałbrzych districts.

In addition to Robert Raczyński, the president of the city from among candidates associated with BS, member Piotr Roman was also elected in Bolesławiec.

Other proposals include zero PIT tax for everyone and not just up to the age of 26, free healthy lunches for all schoolchildren, an Education Development Voucher, i.e. PLN 100 per month for each primary and secondary school pupil to be used for educational and developmental activities, shortening queues to doctors, improving the quality of psychological and psychiatric care for children and young people, and facilities for families.

[45] In September 2023, Non-Partisan Local Government Activists announced that they had now become a nationwide committee and registered lists in the 2023 Polish parliamentary election to the Sejm in all 41 electoral districts, as well as fielding candidates for Senate seats as well.

Main demands of the party for the upcoming 2023 elections are 'free healthy school meals for children', the introduction of 'zero PIT for all citizens', free public and regional transport and an increase in funding for child psychiatry.

[8][9] In 2023, the party stated that it "disagrees with PiS on ideological and world-view issues", and formed a local coalition with the Civic Platform in Lubusz Voivodeship.

I think that a lot of bad things for the left side of the political scene started with Leszek Miller's association with Samoobrona and finding a candidate for the Polish presidency in the person of Ms Ogórek.

The party is also pro-European, believing that cooperation with the European Union as well as the EU Development Funds are crucial to the welfare of Polish regions and local governments.

The movement believes that the local government is increasingly subordinated to the authorities, losing its competences and this process is exacerbated by the state's centralisation policy.

[10] The party advocates for free municipal and city transport, which it considers a "safe, beneficial and resident-friendly solution",[10] necessary to lower greenhouse emissions and ensure a longer lifespan of road infrastructure.

The movement believes that many rural areas of Poland currently suffer from "transport exclusion", which needs to be solved by providing balanced funding to the local governments that would then be used to expand infrastructure.

Therefore, party argues that devolving the administration of local infrastructure to regional governments is necessary not only to combat transport exclusion, but to help break up monopolies as well.

Łukasz Pająk, one of the party's electoral candidates, stated in September 2023: Local authorities in Poland today are severely cut off from funding, and as a result they are largely unable to carry out the basic tasks for which they are intended.

According to the party, as the level of water in rivers and reservoirs in Poland is declining, a development of the so-called small retention system is needed, including protection of marshes or wetlands.