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Poland elections: Conservatives secure win | |
(34 minutes later) | |
Poland's conservative opposition Law and Justice party has won Sunday's general elections. | |
Exit polls suggest it has enough seats to govern alone, with an anticipated 39% of the vote. | |
Its eurosceptic leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski has claimed victory, and the outgoing Prime Minister, Ewa Kopacz of the centrist Civic Platform party, has admitted defeat. | |
Law and Justice has strong support in Poland's rural areas. | |
If the numbers suggested by the exit poll are confirmed, it will be the first time since democracy was restored in Poland in 1989 that a single party has won enough seats to govern alone, the BBC's Adam Easton in Warsaw says. | |
Europe's refugee crisis also proved to be a key topic of debate before the election. While the government has agreed to take in 7,000 migrants, opposition parties have spoken out against the move. | |
Mr Kaczynski, 66, is not running as prime minister and has instead nominated Beata Szydlo, a relative unknown, as the party's choice for the post. | |
However, some observers said Mr Kaczynski could take on the top job himself if Law and Justice scored a convincing victory. |