(
Royal Castle, Warsaw) During his presidency, Wojciechowski attempted to be an enthusiastic politician, who was involved in the performance of the government. He actively supported the non-parliamentary ministry of
Władysław Sikorski and
Władysław Grabski. The height of the president's political influence corresponded with Grabski's cabinet period of activity. Wojciechowski participated in the Political Committee of the Council of Ministers and had an impact on the content of ordinances on the
currency reform, created under special powers of attorney granted to the cabinet by the
Sejm. Wojciechowski attempted to shape the
Polish constitutional system by introducing a
constructive vote of no confidence. The mission of forming a new government was entrusted to the leader of the largest group participating in the overthrow of the previous cabinet, and when Wojciechowski failed to select a cabinet, he advocated leaving the old cabinet or establishing a non-parliamentary cabinet. Wojciechowski used this method after the fall of the second cabinet of
Wincenty Witos when he committed the purpose of setting a new ministry to
Stanisław Thugutt. Another indication of Wojciechowski's constitutional system was the adoption, opposite to the provisions of the constitution that the Sejm was assembling enduringly, and not in the session system. Wojciechowski never closed the session of the Sejm, which was dictated by the constitution. Wojciechowski tried to maintain good relations with
Józef Piłsudski, who was in perpetual dispute with the succeeding cabinets and some parliamentary groups. The reason for the conflict was the organization of military authorities. Piłsudski always saw Wojciechowski as a person who would take his side. When in June 1923,
Stanisław Szeptycki addressed to the Sejm a bill on the highest military authorities, announcing the liquidation of the powerful military council, who Piłsudski served as the chairman, flared up a sharp dispute between him and the Marshal. Wojciechowski tried to settle this dispute. Accordingly, Piłsudski sent a letter to the president in which he addressed him with the words
"You have acted as a hangover in the matter of honour, which does not respect the rights of honour and forgets that honour belongs to people personally, not officially." Wojciechowski tried to negotiate between the opposing parties, including took into account the
Maciej Rataj's commentaries, who objected to committing the position of
Minister of Military Affairs to
Sikorski. Piłsudski did not want to compromise and treated Wojciechowski, as what Rataj regarded, defiantly and as a servant. to tour the Exhibitions of Agriculture and Commerce, 1925 , mid 1920s On 5 September 1924, Wojciechowski visited the Polish city of
Lwów (now
Lviv,
Ukraine). At the end of Kopernika and Legionów Street, an explosive charge was thrown towards the car where the president was travelling. Fortuitously, the bomb did not explode. It was believed that the assassin was Stanisław Steiger, an employee of a commercial company and a student of
Jewish law, who was immediately arrested and kept in prison throughout the subsequent trial, and was threatened by the death penalty. The first trial against Steiger took place on 15 and 16 September 1924 ere the District Court in Lviv. The prosecutor was Alfred Laniewski, and the defender was lawyer Michał Grek. The Regional Court referred the case to ordinary proceedings with the participation of sworn judges. In the proceedings, Steiger was defended by lawyer Natan Loewenstein. The trial during which Loewenstein gave his defence speech did not take place until 16 December 1925. Steiger spent all this time in custody, but by this time, new circumstances regarding the assassination attempt were revealed. Thanks to the lawyer's speech, which Loewenstein published in Lviv a year later, the accused was cleared of the charges and acquitted. The suspect of the assassination ended up being Teofil Olszewski, from the
Ukrainian Military Organization, who subsequently fled Poland by illegally crossing the
German border near
Bytom and was arrested by the
Germans on 3 October 1924. Olszewski was convicted of crossing the border illegally for two weeks in prison, suspended for one year, and then granted political refugee status in Germany and permission to settle in Marienburg (
Malbork), close to the Polish border. On 7 May 1925, Wojciechowski travelled from
Warsaw to
Kraków with the entire ceremonial held by the president. After receiving a report at the station from the commander of the honour company, Wojciechowski asked him if the soldiers were singing religious songs. After receiving a proof answer, Wojciechowski instructed the soldiers to sing some of them. They sang for about twenty minutes until the train left. Such behaviour of the president caused an understandable sensation in the country.
Fall from power during the May Coup in 1926 In November 1925, the government of
Prime Minister Władysław Grabski was replaced by the government of
Aleksander Skrzyński, which had received support from the
National Democrats and the
Polish Socialist Party. General
Lucjan Żeligowski became the new government's
minister of military affairs. However, after the PPS withdrew its support, this government also fell and was replaced by that of Prime Minister
Wincenty Witos, formed by
Polish People's Party "Piast" and
Christian Union of National Unity (
Chjeno-Piast). However, the new government had even less popular support than the previous ones, and pronouncements from
Józef Piłsudski, who viewed the constant power shifts in the
Sejm as chaotic and damaging, set the stage for a
coup d'état. Apart from domestic turmoil, Polish politics had been shaken by a
trade war with Germany, begun in June 1925, and by the signing of the
Treaty of Locarno on 1 December. Under the terms of the treaty, the World War I western European
Allied powers plus Germany guaranteed the inviolability of the German border with Belgium and France as determined by the
Treaty of Versailles. On 10 May 1926, a coalition government of Christian Democrats and Agrarians was formed, and that same day Józef Piłsudski, in an interview with
Kurier Poranny (the Morning Courier) newspaper, said that he was "ready to fight the evil" of sejmocracy and promised a "sanation" (restoration to health) of political life. The newspaper edition was confiscated by the authorities. The night of 11 to 12 May, a state of alert was declared in the Warsaw military garrison, and some units marched to Rembertów, where they pledged their support to Piłsudski. On 12 May, they marched on Warsaw and captured bridges over the
Wisła River. Meanwhile, Wincenty Witos' government declared a state of emergency. At about 17:00 hours, Marshal Piłsudski met Wojciechowski on the
Poniatowski Bridge.
Major Marian Porwit who commanded one of the troops loyal to the government), reported to the president, then reported to Piłsudski and witnessed the discussion between the two dignitaries. Piłsudski demanded the resignation of Witos' cabinet, while the President demanded Piłsudski's capitulation. After the failure of negotiations and the president's departure, Major Porwit refused Piłsudski to let him cross the bridge. On 14 May, at about 13:00 hours, Witos' cabinet decided to move from
Belweder to
Wilanów. Wojciechowski allowed this decision an hour later. After transferring to
Wilanów, Wojciechowski and Witos negotiated with the commanders of troops loyal to the cabinet. The military decided they should move to
Poznań and maintain the armed struggle from beyond. Eventually, to prevent the Warsaw fighting from turning into a country-wide civil war, both Wojciechowski and Witos decided to resign and issued an order to their troops to cease fratricidal fighting. A new government was formed under Prime Minister
Kazimierz Bartel, with Piłsudski as the new
Minister of Military Affairs. On 31 May 1926, the
National Assembly nominated Piłsudski to be president, but he declined. Eventually
Ignacy Mościcki became the new president; Piłsudski, however, wielded much greater
de facto power than his military ministry nominally gave him. == Later life ==