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Oct 26, 2025

Polish President rejects EU migrant-relocation plans in letter to von der Leyen

Polish President rejects EU migrant-relocation plans in letter to von der Leyen
President Karol Nawrocki publicly released a 7 October letter to European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on 26 October, reaffirming that Poland “will not consent to any mechanism that forces the redistribution of illegal migrants onto its territory.” The statement comes as Brussels finalises the legislative ‘Migration & Asylum Pact’, which would require frontline and transit states to accept quota-based relocations or pay compensatory fees.

Nawrocki argues that Poland already shoulders a disproportionate burden, citing four years of orchestrated pressure on its eastern frontier by Belarus and Russia, and the ongoing humanitarian commitment to almost two million Ukrainian war refugees. He insists that compulsory relocation would undermine national security and public confidence in the Schengen system.

The hard-line stance is popular domestically—recent polling by CBOS shows 63 % of Poles oppose mandatory quotas—but risks renewed infringement proceedings from Brussels. EU diplomats say Poland may seek opt-outs similar to those negotiated by Denmark.

For global-mobility directors the main concern is procedural uncertainty: if Warsaw refuses to register relocated asylum seekers, it could face temporary exclusion from certain Schengen information-system upgrades, leading to longer wait times at external borders and additional compliance checks for third-country assignees.
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