Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the outwardly homophobic but allegedly gay twin brother of late Polish President Lech Kaczynski, plans to run to replace him, the AP reports:
 "Jaroslaw Kaczynski said he will run to continue the mission of his brother and others killed in the crash.
  "Jaroslaw Kaczynski said he will run to continue the mission of his brother and others killed in the crash.
'The good of Poland is a common duty that requires an ability to overcome personal suffering, to undertake the task despite a personal tragedy,' Kaczynski said.
'This is why I have taken the decision to run for the president of Poland. I have the family's support in this decision.'"
Jaroslaw was outed by Polish media in October 2006.
Doug Ireland at Gay City News reported at the time, "Poland's second-most important newspaper, Rzeczpolita, published documents-some only recently declassified, and some that were leaked-from the files of the Polish Secret Service that discussed Prime Minister Kaczynski's homosexuality. As part of an investigation, begun in 1992, of right-wing political parties that, the documents said, 'could threaten democracy,' a Secret Service department then headed by Colonel Jan Lesiak reported, 'It is advisable to establish if Jaroslaw Kaczynski remains in a long-term homosexual relationship and, if so, who his partner is.'"
Kaczynski's homosexuality had been rumored since Lech Walesa made a comment 17 years ago on national television regarding the twins' arrival at his birthday party: "Lech came with his wife and Jaroslaw came with his husband." Not until the surfacing of the Secret Service documents did it become so public.
Added Ireland: "Prime Minister Kaczynski, 56, is a bachelor who still lives with his mother in a house filled with an extraordinarily large number of cats."
In April 2007, when he was Prime Minister, Jaroslaw responded to an EU resolution condemning Poland for drafting a law to fire teachers who "promoted homosexuality", saying:
Nobody is limiting gay rights in Poland. However, if we're talking about not having homosexual propaganda in Polish schools, I fully agree with those who feel this way. Such propaganda should not be in schools; it definitely doesn't serve youth well. It's not in the interest of any society to increase the number of homosexuals — that's obvious."



