The result in the first round of elections was in good agreement with the opinion polls. The incumbent President Andrzej Duda received the most votes, just over 43 percent, while 30 percent voted for the challenger, Warzawa's mayor Rafal Trzaskowski.

For the second round, the field has been decimated - now it is a battle between the main candidates. Before Sunday, both have therefore turned to uncertain voters from the right-wing Confederacy, which gained 6 percent in the first round.

Shared constituency

Who will win the voters' group favor is not given, says SVT's envoy in Poland, Natcha Lopez.

- They have more in common with President Duda when it comes to value conservatism. But when it comes to the economy, they are closer to Trzarskowski, who stands for a more market liberal economic policy.

The electorate is divided along several lines. In addition to gaps in valuation issues, the voting pattern from the first round shows how the country is divided between town and countryside.

Several uncertain

- If you look at a map of how to vote in Poland you can see how voters vote for Andrzej Duda across the country. The exception is a dozen resorts that are interspersed with one another and these are the big cities with over 300,000 inhabitants. So there is a clear class aspect here, says Natacha Lopez.

The election result is uncertain - the opinion polls since the first election round do not give a clear picture. In addition, at most 11 percent still seem to consider which candidate they should vote for.