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Poland's Tusk says Russian hackers attacked party websites before election

A woman stands next to a campaign poster of Warsaw Mayor Rafał Trzaskowski, a liberal candidate in Poland's presidential election, in Lodz, Poland, Friday, May 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)

Key Points

  • Two days before the presidential vote, Russian hackers operating on Telegram attacked the websites of Prime Minister Tusk’s ruling Civic Platform party, according to Tusk’s post on X.
  • Websites of other governing coalition parties—the Left and the Polish People’s Party (PSL)—were also targeted in the ongoing cyberattack, with Polish authorities conducting intensive investigations.
  • A Polish state research institute, NASK, identified and reported paid political ads on Facebook as possible electoral interference, leading Meta to remove the ads.
  • These ad accounts spent more on political content in the past week than any election committee, allegedly aiming to support one candidate and discredit others ahead of Sunday’s contest.
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WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk said that Russian hackers attacked the websites of parties in his ruling coalition on Friday, two days before a presidential election.

The frontrunner in Sunday's election is a high-ranking member of Tusk's Civic Platform party, Warsaw Mayor Rafał Trzaskowski.

“Two days before the elections, a group of Russian hackers operating on Telegram attacked the websites of the Civic Platform,” Tusk wrote on X on Friday afternoon.

Tusk said that the websites of other parties in his governing coalition, the Left and the Polish People's Party (PSL), were also targeted. “The services are conducting intensive actions in this matter. The attack is ongoing,” he said.

Polish authorities were also investigating paid political advertisements on Facebook that a Polish state research institute, NASK, identified as possible electoral interference. NASK is the Polish acronym for National Research and Academic Computer Network.

The institute said that it reported the misinformation to Meta, which owns Facebook, and that the ads were removed.

“Ad accounts involved in the campaign have spent more on political content than any election committee in the past seven days,” NASK said Wednesday. “The actions were intended to ostensibly support one of the candidates and discredit others.”

Already in late 2024, Polish authorities had reported up to 1,000 Russian and Belarusian cyberattacks a day targeting government institutions and agencies, and have linked them to the country’s support for neighboring Ukraine in its three-year war against Russia’s invasion.

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