Between 2009 and 2019, Slavic Union put forward committees three times for the European Parliament elections, but has so far failed to push through any list due to a lack of the required number of signatures.
[2] One of the key demands in the Slavic Union's programme is the strengthening of alliances between Poland and Central and Eastern European countries.
The party also advocates for leaving the European Union, strengthening defence, introducing free health care and single-mandate electoral districts.
[9] The party thentook part in numerous pickets in front of the Sejm against plans to deploy a US missile defence shield in Poland.
In 2008, a new party called Patriotic Poland was found, which closely cooperated with the Slavic Union and heavily influenced its program.
While remaining a leading activist of Patriotic Poland, Jankowski ran in the 2015 presidential election behalf of the Slavic Union, although he failed to collect enough signatures to register his candidacy.
[17] It was also the case for the 2009 European Parliament election in Poland, where despite the registration of the committee, it failed to put forward any electoral list (Krzysztof Kononowicz).
[18] In the 2010 Polish presidential election, Slavic Union fielded the candidacy of Krzysztof Mazurski, who failed to collect 100.000 signatures and was not registered.
In the 2011 Polish parliamentary election, the party registered its candidate Anita Walotek in the Sosnowiec-Jaworzno district, who received 2.35% (2,977) of the vote, coming in last, 6th place.
[22] In the 2018 Polish local elections, the party registered its own committee, fielding lists in half of the districts for the Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship Sejmik.
[24] Vice-chairman of the ZS Zdzisław Jankowski, meanwhile, opened the Konin list of Zjednoczeni Ponad Podziałami to the Sejm (received 679 votes).
[26] Also, Zbigniew Adamczyk entered as a candidate in the 2020 Polish presidential election,[27] however, he did not collect the required number of signatures, and after the vote did not take place, he did not register the committee in the second round.
Tymiński is a populist businessman who lived in Canada before returning to Poland and partaking in the 1990 Polish presidential election, where he shocked the media by taking second place in the first round as an "out of nowhere" dark horse candidate.
Tymiński had many political labels attached to him during the election, being described as, among others, a "progressive libertarian, civilised capitalist, and ended up as a reactionary endek, Darwinist, almost (or even) fascist".
The party accused Ukrainian immigrants and refugees of possessing anti-Polish sympathies and setting up "post-Banderite" underground organisations in Poland.
[1] The party argues that Banderism is growing in Ukraine and believes that Russia is a "natural ally" of Poland, stating: "We and the Russians are Slavs, peoples of one root, one blood".
The Union party Ukrainian historical policy, especially the glorification of the UPA, and accuses the Lithuanian authorities of assimilating Poles in Lithuania.
Party activists compared the policies of Lithuania to Prussian deportations under the German Empire and stated: "At the beginning of the twentieth century, Poles in Greater Poland resisted strongly against the Germanisation of education.