


Poland’s presidential election goes down to the wire
Exit polls are split on whether the liberal or conservative candidate leads
POLAND’S PRESIDENTIAL election, which pits a centrist liberal against a hard-right nationalist, has been watched closely all across Europe. A liberal win would cement Poland’s newfound influence in the European Union’s mainstream; a populist one would shift it towards the EU’s growing bloc of nationalist insurgents. Just after voting ended on the evening of June 1st, two exit polls gave Rafal Trzaskowski, the candidate of the ruling liberal camp (pictured), a razor-thin edge. But a later exit poll gave the opposition candidate, Karol Nawrocki, a narrow lead.
Explore more

An astonishing raid deep inside Russia rewrites the rules of war
Ukraine’s high-risk strikes damage over 40 top-secret strategic bombers

Karol Nawrocki, a possible Polish president with a shadowy past
The right-wing candidate was supposed to be free of baggage. Not so fast

Europe fantasises about an “Airbus of everything!” Can it fly?
From chips to satellites Euro-champions are back. Expect turbulence.
A new threat to Erdogan: Gen Z
Young people are fed up with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
Europe’s tricky trade threesome
Negotiating with two superpowers is hard
France’s improbable adult baptism boom
A secular country returns to the church