Polish Beer-Lovers' Party

[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."

Janusz Rewiński and Leszek Bubel (third and fourth from the left) during a PPPP political convention