[3] Andrzej Kołodziejski and Adam Halber, two editors for the now defunct magazine Pan, were responsible for most of the party's early promotion.
[3][4] The humorous name and disillusionment with Poland's political transformation led some Poles to vote for and/or join the party,[5] with it having 10,000 registered members by July 1991.
"[4] Although it started as a joke party, its members developed a serious platform with time, such as stopping the domestic sale of leaded gasoline.
[2] Moreover, the idea of political discussion in establishments that served quality beer became a symbol of freedom of association and expression, intellectual tolerance, and a higher standard of living.
"[citation needed] Leszek Bubel [pl], future president of the Polish National Party, became leader of the PPPP in 1992 after Rewiński was accused of "cryptic financial operations."