Barbara Skrzypek


Barbara Skrzypek was a Polish government official, who from 1990 to 2020, was the secretary, and one of the closest co-workers, of Jarosław Kaczyński, chairperson of the Law and Justice party. In 2018, she was ranked at the 41st place on the list of the 50 most influential people in Poland by the news magazine Wprost. Later, she was a board member in the Lech Kaczyński Institute, an organisation which is the main shareholder of the company Srebrna.

Life and career

Barbara Skrzypek was born on 8 January 1959.
From 1980 to 1989, she was a clerk in the Office of the Council of Ministers. There, among other functions, she was a senior office clerk and senior statistician in the Secret Chancellery and also worked in the Prime Minister office and in the office of Michał Janiszewski, the ministry director. Miała dostęp do tajnych akt PRL. She later began working in the Chancellery of the President of the Republic of Poland. In 1990, she became the secretary, and one of the closest co-workers of Jarosław Kaczyński, chairperson of the Law and Justice party. She was also a head of the party chancery and director of the party presidium office.
She had retired from her position as a secretary in 2020, after working with Kaczyński for almost 30 years. The same year, she became a member of the board of the Lech Kaczyński Institute, the main shareholder in the. Skrzypek herself owned two shares in said company, with her son holding another.
In 2018, the weekly news magazine Wprost had ranked her at the 41st place on their list of the "50 most influential Poles", recognising her as "the most mysterious, and simultaneously one of the most important women in Polish politics". She became more widely known to the broader public thanks to the 2017 political satire television series The Chairman's Ear, revolving around the character of Jarosław Kaczyński. It featured her fictionalised version, portrayed by Izabela Dąbrowska.

Death

On 15 March 2025, it was reported that Skrzypek had died that morning. She was 66. Three days earlier, Skrzypek had been interviewed for several hours in relation to the scandal, with Jarosław Kaczyński and other senior Law and Justice figures claiming that the interview precipitated her death; in response to such claims, the District Prosecutor's Office in Warsaw stated that it was prepared to sue in order to protect its reputation, as well as stating that Skrzypek was interviewed in a civilised manner. While Krzysztof Gotkowicz, Skrzypek's lawyer, was not allowed to sit in on the interview, the District Prosecutor's Office said that the interview was not a criminal interrogation and so did not require the presence of a lawyer. Gotkowicz said he had requested to be present at the interview on the grounds of Skrzypek's poor health but prosecutor Ewa Wrzosek said that, while Skrzypek did have poor eyesight and was experiencing stress in relation to the interview, such health issues were not an insurmountable obstacle to proceedings and that Gotkowicz had not provided evidence to the contrary.