Right-libertarian: fiscally conservative (monetarism/market monetarism are interesting), socially liberal (pro-immigration and against repressive drug policies, mainly).
It's hard for me to answer, I believe that answer would be very subjective. Social "bubbles" are powerful, someone who works with highly educated people may have entirely different experience than somebody who is mainly around workers.
Also, did you know, that, polls showed, that in 1993, when abortions became severely restricted by law in your country, most Poles favoured maintaining the very liberal abortion law of the communist era?
I feel no obligation to have opinion about everything under the sun. And ideologically whether you are pro-choice or "pro-life" depends more on definition of "human life" (when something can be called human?), than on interpretation of human freedom.
Actually, for libertarians, human freedom is what matters. Regardless, what I mention shows, that, the Polish government abuses its relations with the Catholic Church.
If there had a been a referendum on abortion in Poland in 1993 and most Poles had voted for keeping the very liberal law of the communist era, would Poland be more secular, nowadays?