Its president became Piotr Jaroszyński, a right-wing publicist and commentator on Radio Maryja, leading programmes in the series ‘Myśląc Ojczyzna’.
More than 5% of votes were also obtained in the following voivodeships: Kujawsko-Pomorskie (5.7%), Małopolskie (5.7%), Mazowieckie (5.6%), Opolskie (5.3%), Podkarpackie (5.7%), Podlaskie (5.4%), Pomorskie (5.8%), Śląskie (5.9%) and Warmińsko-Mazurskie (5.3%).
[1] Despite the fact that the assocation crossed the five-percent electoral threshold in as many as 11 voivodeships, it only managed to win one seat, which makes the proportion of votes cast for it nationally five times higher than the proportion of seats won in local assemblies.
[4] The Polish Family Association heavily attacked the Solidarity Electoral Action, arguing that it cannot be called an authentic right-wing party ("merely the right finger of the left hand"), stating that the reforms carried out by its government are detrimental to the Polish national and Catholicism.
[4] The association's stated priorities was creation of a right-wing alternative to the Solidarity Electoral Action, influencing policies of the Polish right-wing parties, reverting and redoing the government's administrative, economic and educational reforms, engaging Polish families in some tasks of local governments, expanding the role of the Catholic Church in social life, and maintaining the Auschwitz Cross (in light of the controversy that it sparked in 1998).