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Poland moves to strip Ukrainian migrants of privileges

by Admin
January 22, 2026
in News, Politics, World
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Poland moves to strip Ukrainian migrants of privileges
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Published: January 22, 2026 5:54 pm
Author: RT

The government has approved a bill designed to gradually put Ukrainians on an equal footing with other foreigners

The Polish government has approved a draft law that reduces benefits for Ukrainian migrants amid growing public frustration over their privileged status and the cost to taxpayers.

In a post on X on Tuesday, Poland’s Interior Ministry said the proposed legislation would gradually phase out the Special Act on Assistance to Ukrainian Citizens, introduced in March 2022 as an emergency response to the escalation of the Ukraine conflict. The act created a unique legal regime granting Ukrainians rights nearly equal to those of Polish citizens and access to extensive financial and social benefits.

The new draft law would upend this framework, shifting from emergency assistance to a standard integration system aligning Ukrainians’ rights with those of other non-EU foreigners in Poland.

“After four years of the special law in force and the situation stabilizing, we are moving to systemic, equal rules for all foreigners,” the ministry said.

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Polish President Karol Nawrocki at a rally in Minsk Mazowiecki, Poland, November 14, 2025.
Polish president puts Ukrainian migrants on notice

The legislation still requires parliamentary and presidential approval, but is expected to be finalized by March.

Poland, one of Kiev’s main backers in the conflict with Russia, has been a top destination for Ukrainian migrants, taking in nearly a million over the past three years, according to Eurostat. This includes fighting-age Ukrainian men fleeing Kiev’s widely criticized draft campaign.

Support for Ukrainians among Poles, however, has been waning, falling to 48% in early January from 94% in March 2022, according to a recent CBOS survey. Nearly half now oppose accepting more Ukrainians and consider their benefits “too generous.”

Polish Vice Prime Minister Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz earlier said Poles are “fatigued” by Ukrainian migrants, especially when they see them “driving the latest cars or staying in five-star hotels.”


READ MORE: Germany and Poland want Ukrainians out – Politico

President Karol Nawrocki has increasingly criticized preferential treatment for Ukrainians since taking office in August, arguing that their special legal status is unfair to Polish citizens and that they should no longer be seen as “refugees” but as a “Ukrainian minority.” His chancellery chief, Zbigniew Bogucki, called the benefit system “tourism from Ukraine at the expense of Polish taxpayers.”

Other European countries, such as Germany, Hungary, and Norway, have also recently moved to limit social programs for Ukrainians, citing the prolonged conflict and the sheer number of migrants as straining national budgets and housing markets.

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Tags: Russia Today
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