Micha³ ¯ebrowski is a mustachioed politician.  He turned to the young people.  “No one is looking at your crotch”

Micha³ ¯ebrowski is a mustachioed politician. He turned to the young people. “No one is looking at your crotch”

Micha³ ¯ebrowski took part in a campaign encouraging people to vote in local government elections this weekend. In the spot, he played the role of a villain – a mustachioed mayor who has something to say, especially to the young.

is one of the heroes of the pro-turnout campaign of the SEXEDPL organization. The foundation deals not only with sexual education and mental health of young people, but also encourages newly minted adults to actively participate in building democracy – i.e. in elections. And the local government ones will be available soon. In the foundation’s ad, Żebrowski became the perfect villain – a stereotypical mayor from a smaller town who has some brutal truths to tell the youth.

Michał Żebrowski “discourages” participation in the parliamentary elections

The genre scene is very simple. Here is the mayor (Michał Żebrowski) and his assistant (Dorota Salamon) meeting with young people at the office. We need to thank young people for voting in large numbers on October 15. But now their role is over, because why should they be interested in what is happening in local governments? It’s just small politics, nobody “looks into their crotches” here, says Żebrowski’s character.

Dear young people, I would like to thank you very much for your involvement in politics. Record attendance! (…) Bravo, bravo! You have proven how to fight for your rights. (…) But your rights are big politics. This is where the local government is. There are really serious matters here, administrative ones! No one is looking at your crotches here. It does not take away your freedom. So, as they used to say… stay at home – ends the self-satisfied “mayor”.

Of course, he is wrong, because although local government elections may seem detached from big politics, ultimately decisions “close to us” are made in district and city offices, and with the mayor and village head. Their support will give one candidate the job of school principal, while the other will be rejected without support at the very beginning. This is where local HPV vaccination programs are established, and where illegal anti-LGBT resolutions are made – regardless of what is happening in “big” politics. Żebrowski and SEXEDPL explain to young people why the “October 15 effect” should work during every election, including the next ones.

“On April 7, we are fighting again for record attendance and what kind of everyday life we ​​will live in,” say the creators of the spot.

Source: Gazeta

You may also like

Immediate Access Pro