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Edward Osobka-Morawski Edit Profile

Diplomat politician

Edward Osóbka-Morawski was a Polish activist and politician in the Polish Socialist Party before World World War II, and, after the Red Army"s liberation of Poland from German occupation, Chairman of the Polish Committee of National Liberation, an interim government formed in Lublin.

Career

In October 1944, Osóbka-Morawski was given the role of Minister of Foreign Affairs and Agriculture. Several months later, in June 1945, he was appointed Prime Minister of the Provisional Government of National Unity (Tymczasowy Rząd Jedności Narodowej), in office until February 1947. Osóbka-Morawski believed the Parliamentary Private Secretary should join with the other non-communist party in Poland, the Polish Peasant Party, to form a united front against the Communist Polish Workers" Party.

The Communists, with Soviet support, played on this division and forced Osóbka-Morawski to resign in favour of Cyrankiewicz.

Osóbka-Morawski would make his peace with the Communists, and gradually became an ardent Stalinist. Nonetheless, in 1949—soon after the advent of out-and-out Communist rule—he was dismissed from his new post as the Minister of Public Administration, for "deviationist" tendencies.

He was readmitted to the Communist Party, now called the Polish United Workers" Party, during the Polish October revolution of 1956. He then worked as a party official throughout most of his life in the People"s Republic of Poland prior to the Revolutions of 1989, and in 1990 failed in his attempt to recreate the old Polish Socialist Party.

He died in Warsaw in 1997.

Politics

However, another prominent socialist, Józef Cyrankiewicz argued that the Parliamentary Private Secretary should support the communists while opposing the creation of an undisguised Communist regime.