Meant to showcase openness, it instead revealed eyebrow-raising recipients such as a pizzeria with tanning beds, a chain of vodka bars, and even two yachts bought by a restaurant owner.
The funds came from the HoReCa scheme as a part of Poland’s €59.8B EU National Recovery Plan. The goal was to help small tourism and hospitality businesses diversify post-pandemic. PiS, the far-right party ousted in 2023, pounced. MEP Tobiasz Bocheński called it “one of the biggest scandals since 1989” and staged a stunt outside Tusk’s office with a mock plaque: “Ministry of Herring and Vodka.” The opposition is demanding parliamentary inspections and prosecutor referrals. They’re using the scandal to hammer Tusk’s credibility and coalition management. Tusk responded swiftly with “zero tolerance” for abuse of EU funds. He vowed consequences for anyone who misused money. Prosecutors have launched inquiries, audit results are expected by late September. The heat of the scandal isn’t just on Tusk.
The funds ministry is run by Polska 2050, a coalition partner led by Szymon Hołownia. PiS is using the scandal to drive a wedge between Tusk and Hołownia, whose party is vital to the government’s majority.
This scandal could deepen coalition strains, stall legislation, and give PiS a potent narrative ahead of future elections. Transparency was supposed to be a win. Instead, it handed the opposition a loaded weapon.
In politics, even good intentions can backfire especially when yachts and vodka are involved.
