^a: In 24 January 2001, KLD faction split from this party to form Civic Platform.
The Freedom Union (Polish: Unia Wolności, UW) was a liberal[6] democratic political party in Poland.
History
It was founded on 20 March 1994 out of the merger of the Democratic Union (Unia Demokratyczna, UD) and the Liberal Democratic Congress (Kongres Liberalno-Demokratyczny, KLD). Both of these parties had roots in the Solidarity trade union movement. It represented European democratic and liberal tradition, i.e., it advocated free market economy and individual liberty, rejected extremism and fanaticism, favoured European integration (in the form of European Union membership), rapid privatisation of the enterprises still owned by the Polish state and decentralisation of the government.
In the 1991 general elections, the KLD received 7.5% of the vote and 37 seats in the Sejm (out of 460 seats) and the UD got 12.3% of the votes and 62 seats. In 1993 the KLD got 4.0% of the votes and was left without seats; the UD got 10.6% of the votes and 74 seats. In 1997 the UW got 13.4% of the votes and 60 seats.
The initiative by the FU leadership to found the centre/social-liberal Democratic Party (Partia Demokratyczna – demokraci.pl) attracted a lot of attention. It was cofounded by Władysław Frasyniuk and economy minister Jerzy Hausner, joined by prime minister Marek Belka. Former FU member Tadeusz Mazowiecki also joined the initiative. Legally the centrist Democratic Party, founded 9 May 2005, is the successor of the FU.
^Kołodko, Grzegorz (2009). "A two-thirds of success. Poland's post-communist transformation"(PDF). Communist and Post-Communist Studies. 42. TIGER - Globalization, Transformation and Integration Economic Research: 330. As for the political consequences, two parties of the coalition government, neither the neoliberal Freedom Union, UW, nor the populist Solidarity Election Action, AWS, were able in the election of 2001 to receive a minimum 5 percent of votes required to get to the parliament.
^Arthur S. Banks; Thomas C. Muller; William R. Overstreet; Judith F. Isacoff, eds. (2009). Political Handbook of the World 2009. CQ Press. p. 1071. ISBN978-0-87289-559-1. ISSN0193-175X. His main opponents among 17 other registered candidates were Aleksander KWAŚNIEWSKI of the SLD/SdRP, Jacek KUROŃ of the center-right Freedom Union (Unia Wolnósci—UW), and former prime ministers Olszewski and Pawlak.
^Popić, Tamara (24 November 2014). Policy Learning, Fast and Slow: Market-Oriented Reforms of Czech and Polish Healthcare Policy, 1989-2009(PDF) (Doctor of Political and Social Sciences thesis). Florence: European University Institute. p. 88. The Freedom Union (Unia Wolnosci - UW) emerged as one of the strongest parties, defining itself ideologically as a centre-right party and presenting liberal views on both economic and social reforms.