[1][3] Main proposals of the party include protecting traditional money and currency as one of the provisions of the Constitution of Poland, withdrawal from the European Union if it is not "prepared to cooperate for mutual benefit", making social security and vaccinations optional only, and construction of new coal mines and a gradual increase in coal mining.
Among the founders, in addition to Rafał Piech, were Anna Siarkowska (MP of the PiS club), former MP Jan Łopuszański (President of Porozumienie Polskie), Zbigniew Hałat (former Deputy Minister of Health and Chief Sanitary Inspector), journalist Jan Pospieszalski and social activists Karolina Elbanowska and Tomasz Elbanowski.
Other candidates included a councillor from the Law and Justice party's club in the Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship Sejmik.
The grouping also fielded four candidates for the Senate of the Republic of Poland (including PiS MP Malgorzata Janowska, who belongs to the Republican Party).
[9] In 2023, the party ran a radically right-wing campaign - its program included a demand that family gardens be sold with a 99 percent discount for Polish nationals; the year 1989 was described as "the time when the fourth partition of Poland began", and Poland was described as a colony of the "Western capital".
Among other things, it proposes a voluntary Social Security program for entrepreneurs for a period of three years and making health contributions dependent on income.
It stresses that Polish membership in the European Union must be conditional, and maintained only if it brings beneficial cooperation.