In a discussion on Saturday's 'Presidents and Premiers' program, Warsaw Mayor Rafał Trzaskowski announced he would depoliticize positions within the city's hospitals after a scandal involving the Southern Hospital in Warsaw. He also removed the supervisory board of the hospital and two deputy mayors resigned. Former Prime Minister Leszek Miller suggested that the current government has too many high-level positions, leading to inefficiency. He proposed that the new prime minister start by implementing a rule limiting each ministry to one secretary of state who is also a member of parliament. Former President Bronisław Komorowski agreed, stating there is an excessive number of high-ranking positions in both the government and the presidency, partly due to political considerations over professional qualifications. He noted that structural complexity has been created to satisfy coalition partners but warned against deep reforms that could risk breaking the ruling coalition. Komorowski emphasized the need to focus on a few key issues to advance Polish affairs, including healthcare reform. Former PSL leader Waldemar Pawlak mentioned constitutional provisions allowing ministers to manage
Lecture du biais (Centre): The article presents viewpoints from multiple former politicians, including Leszek Miller and Bronisław Komorowski, discussing administrative efficiency and political influence in governance. The framing appears balanced, presenting their arguments without overtly favoring one side. There is no use
Pourquoi ces scores (Factualité 85 · Objectivité 70): Factuality is high as it accurately reports on the events surrounding the Warsaw South Hospital affair, including Trzaskowski’s actions and Miller’s comments. Objectivity is lower due to the political tone and potential bias towards criticizing current administration practices.





