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Lech Walesa, the hero of Poland's anti-communist revolution and a former president, also watched the ceremony from a balcony in the assembly hall. Tusk has remained popular thanks to an image he has cultivated of moderation and because the economy has grown impressively since Poland joined the European Union in 2004. It was the only EU country to avoid recession during the global crisis of 2008-09. President Bronislaw Komorowski addressed the newly elected lawmakers, urging them to work together to maintain Poland's strong economic performance as Europe faces a new financial crisis. He called on them to show the courage to make changes that would bolster the nation's development, including trimming bureaucracy, reforming the judiciary and the health system and tackling state debt. "We know that the state exists for the citizens, and not the other way around," Komorowski said. Lawmakers then rose, one by one, to take their vows. Tusk formally resigned with his outgoing government, and later in the day will be ceremoniously tasked by the president with forming a new Cabinet. The new government will then face a confidence vote in parliament in coming weeks. No date has been set yet for that vote. Tusk plans to keep governing with his junior partner of the past four years, the conservative agrarian Polish People's Party. He also plans to keep many of his key ministers in their jobs, including Foreign Minister Radek Sikorski and Finance Minister Jacek Rostowski.
[Associated
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