The elections
were rigged by the pro-
Sanacja elements in the
Polish government under the control of
Józef Piłsudski (although Piłsudski left most of the details of the internal politics to others). After the
BBWR came up well short of a majority in the
1928 elections, Sanacja and Piłsudski left nothing to chance. s' -
Brest-on-the-Bug." The picture is a reference to the
Brest trial and the "Brest elections", when many Polish politicians of the
Centrolew party were imprisoned in the
Brest Fortress (pictured). The elections were supposed to take place in May, but the government invalidated the May results by disbanding the parliament in August and with increasing pressure on the opposition started a new campaign, the new elections being scheduled to November. Using the anti-government
demonstrations as a pretext, 20 members of the oppositions, including most of the leaders of
Centrolew alliance (from the
Polish Socialist Party,
Polish People's Party "Piast" and
Polish People's Party "Wyzwolenie") were arrested in September without a
warrant, only on the order of the minister of internal security,
Felicjan Sławoj Składkowski accusing them of plotting an anti-government
coup. The opposition members (who included the former prime minister
Wincenty Witos, and the
Silesian national hero,
Wojciech Korfanty) were imprisoned in the
Brest Fortress, where their trial took place (thus the popular name for the election: the 'Brest election'). A number of less known activists were arrested throughout the country. They were released after the end of the election in the same month. The
Brest trial ended in January 1932, with 10 accused receiving sentences up to three years of imprisonment. Some of them decided to emigrate instead. In addition, the minorities were also discriminated against; the government crackdown on opposition was especially hard in the eastern provinces, affecting the
Blok Ukraińsko-Białoruski (Ukrainian-Belarusian Bloc) party. On 24 November 1930,
Time, in its coverage of the elections, wrote: : During the campaign which ended in Poland's general election last week, opposition papers were so mercilessly censored that some were reduced to printing pictures of
Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900) with the caption: He Died Crazy. Because Dictator Jozef Pilsudski has publicly made such statements as that "Parliament is a prostitute!" (Time, July 9, 1928) and because he somewhat resembles Philosopher Nietzsche in face and whiskers, his government promptly confiscated all Nietzschean campaign pictures, all papers in which they appeared. Despite the governments pressure, the opposition members (from Centrolew and
endecja) still sat in the parliament, soon in the new parliament they tried to pass the
motion of no confidence to the new government. The imprisonment and trial of political opponents was a setback for Polish democracy, but no genuinely open trials of political opponents such as the one in Poland took place elsewhere in contemporary
Central Europe The exception was the 1933 Berlin trial of the Bulgarian communist Georgy M. Dimitrov. The success of BBWR, while certainly enhanced by the government crackdown on opposition, also stemmed from the fact that Sanacja and Piłsudski's held considerable support, and the Centrolew politicians were viewed as incapable in preventing the economic crisis (
Great Depression). The Centrolew coalition fell apart in 1931 due to internal conflicts. ==Results==