Silesian Regional Party

[12] Nationally, the party is affiliated with the Civic Coalition and ran on its behalf in some electoral districts of Upper Silesia.

It gained 3.1% (losing, among others, to another regional party, Ślonzoki Razem, which won 3.23%) and 1.13%, respectively, which translated into 0.38% nationally (14th result among all committees).

Rafal Adamus became chairman, Zenon Lis became vice-chairman, Piotr Snaczke became secretary and Łukasz Giertler became treasurer.

[19] In the parliamentary elections of the same year, ŚPR activists (three for the Sejm and Henryk Mercik for the Senate) ran on behalf of the Civic Coalition,[20][21] but failed to gain seats.

ŚPR candidates for the Sejm, on the KO lists, received a total of 2452 votes (representing 0.01% nationally).

[24] As a result of Henryk Mercik's support for Marek Wesoły, MP of the Law and Justice party, in the early elections for the mayor of Ruda Śląska, in August 2022 the chairman of the RAŚ Jerzy Gorzelik announced his departure from the party, and on 18 October of the same year Henryk Mercik was dismissed from the position of chairman of the ŚPR.

[28][29] On 11 January 2023, this court deregistered ŚPR due to the party's late submission of its 2019 financial report.

[33] The party offers an expansive program of investment called Śródmieście+ that aims at renovating Silesian cities, extensive urban greening and other environmental measures, while also decentralising and extending social welfare in Silesia.

According to the party, this revenue should then be spend on education and healthcare, with the focus on extending the accessibility of these institutions in the poorest areas.

[35] Other economical goals of the party is the development of rail transport, environmental programs to curb smog, urban greening of Silesian cities, and the revitalisation of brownfield lands (degrades areas).

[37] In the 2019 European Parliament election in Poland, the party endorsed Łukasz Kohut, who was a member of the New Left coalition at the time.

Too many towns and cities in Silesia have been ruined by decades of predatory coal mining from beneath their surfaces.

Nevertheless, there has not been, and cannot be, any consent to the opening of new mining facilities which, in a few decades' time, could lead to the degradation of the areas where they will operate.

[2] The party wants to decentralise Poland and empower local government along the ideals of regionalism and localism, but it also wishes to decentralise the administrative organisation of Silesia itself;[2] the party argues against the current concentration of all governmental institutions of Silesia in Katowice, and advocates for an even distribution of administrative forces in the region instead.

The party condemns Brexit and argues that European states should not let "xenophobia and intolerance against foreigners" stay in the way of further cooperation between the nations of Europe.

SPR argued that only a strong European community could provide Silesia with "an exit from infrastructural, economic and environmental decline", and will allow Silesians to preserve their cultural heritage.