Mateusz Morawiecki outlined his policies both foreign and domestic in a speech to parliament a day after he was sworn in and tasked with boosting the economy and Poland's image abroad.
A 49-year-old former international banker, Morawiecki succeeds Beata Szydlo at the helm of the same ruling Law and Justice party team.
Poland has developed a number of recent conflicts with EU leaders who have threatened punitive actions to curb Polish moves seen as going against EU values.
He also said Poland was against leaving some EU members behind and against "dividing Europe into those better and those worse" where stronger nations are favoured.
Also Read
"That's not right," he said.
The bones of contention include Poland's refusal to accept migrants within a sharing program, its reorganisations of the judiciary that is seen as a threat to the rule of law and the country's logging in a pristine forest.
Morawiecki said Poland will abide by the ruling of a top EU court, expected within months, on the forest issue. A confidence vote for the government is scheduled after midnight and is expected to pass.
A few hundred anti-government protesters demonstrated today outside parliament against the ruling party's policies.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content