Historians of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth have traditionally presented the 
liberum veto, a parliamentary practice that allowed any member of parliament to object to 
any measure and thereby suspend deliberations, as a result of Polish citizens’ (the 
szlachta’s) peculiar political culture, particularly their attachment to the principles of 
consensus and unanimity. This assumption led scholars to focus on theoretical 
justifications for the abuse of the veto that began during the second half of the 
seventeenth century and by the middle of the eighteenth century had paralyzed the Polish 
parliament (the Sejm) entirely.  Until now, no one has considered the advent and 
persistence of the veto in the context of the long struggle between the two central 
political ideologies of the early modern period, republicanism and absolutism. By 
examining the writings of republican citizens who used and defended the veto during the 
heated battle over constitutional reform waged in the Commonwealth during the 1660s 
and early 1670s, we see that the veto was initially embraced as a tool to defend 
republican liberty against the illegal designs of a king bent on monarchical reforms. This 
tactic proved disastrous for the citizens who first used the veto to suspend parliaments as 
their opponents quickly embraced the practice for their own selfish ends. The result was 
partisan gridlock as well as a theoretical impasse between those who advocated a well-
egulated (but unfree) monarchy and those who advocated a free (but chaotic) republic. 
Not until Stanisław Dunin Karwicki wrote his De ordinanda republica in 1704 or 1705 
were republican writers able to propose a constitution that guaranteed both efficient 
execution of laws and security without sacrificing the positive freedoms Poles understood 
to be the proper end of any constitution.  Although Karwicki’s reforms were never put 
into practice, they shed invaluable light on the struggle that defined seventeenth-century 
politics across Europe and that in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth led to the 
creation and curious evolution of the liberum veto.