Wanda Nowicka

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Wanda Nowicka
File:Wanda Nowicka Sejm 2014 02.JPG
Deputy Marshal of Sejm 2011-2015
In office
8 November 2011 – 11 November 2015
Personal details
Born 21 November 1956
Lublin
Nationality Polish
Website http://www.wandanowicka.eu/

Wanda Hanna Nowicka (born 21 November 1956) is a Polish politician and activist who served as the Deputy Marshal of the Sejm of the Republic of Poland from 8 November 2011 to 11 November 2015. Born in Lublin, she attended the University of Warsaw, graduating with a degree in classical philology, and worked as a teacher of Latin and English from 1985 to 1993. In 1990, Nowicka co-founded Neutrum, the Association for State Neutrality, an organization focused on the separation of church and state in Polish politics.[1] She was also one of the founders of the Federation for Women and Family Planning in 1992, a non-governmental organization that combined Neutrum and four other organizations. In 2003, Nowicka invited Women on Waves to Poland; their ship, the Langenort, arrived for two days to provide abortions for those in the first trimester of pregnancy; this move caused some protest from the League of Polish Families.[2]

Politically, Nowicka has allied herself with various parties, but has remained unaffiliated outside of briefly joining the Solidarity movement in 1980 and 1981.[3] She ran for political office unsuccessfully several times in the 2000s while allied with the Democratic Left Alliance, however she was elected to the Masovian Regional Assembly. In 2011, she allied herself with Palikot's Movement, and after the party won two seats in the Sejm in the 2011 elections out of Warsaw, she won the second seat alongside Palikot.[4] She was named Deputy Marshal of the Sejm on 8 Novmber 2011, and in February 2013 was removed from Palikot's Movement, finishing the rest of her term as an independent member of the Sejm.[5]

In 2015, instead of running again for the Sejm, Nowicka planned to run for President. She received formal support from the Polish Left and the Social Democracy of Poland, but was only able to get 91,000 out of 100,000 required signatures.[6] She had also run in the 2014 European Parliament election out of Warsaw. She finished second in the district with 7,479 votes, however the coalition she joined failed to gain any seats in the elections.[7]

References

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