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Polish Constitutional Tribunal crisis (2015 – ongoing)

The Polish Constitutional Tribunal crisis has been an ongoing political conflict in Poland starting in the second half of 2015 over the appointment of five of the 15 judges of the Constitutional Tribunal.

A Committee for the Defence of Democracy protest in Warsaw against Poland's new government, 12 December 2015

In Poland, constitutional judges must be elected by the Lower House, and must take an oath of office before the President. In 2015, the governing Civic Platform (Platforma Obywatelska, PO) party lost both the presidential election and the parliament (Sejm) majority to the Law and Justice party (Prawo i Sprawiedliwość, PiS), which won an unprecedented absolute majority of seats. After the new (eighth) Sejm was seated on 12 November 2015 and the new president of Poland, Andrzej Duda, assumed office on 6 August 2015, the judicial branch would be left as the only branch of the government of Poland not under the control of PiS provided that the due seat replacements were made in advance.

The terms of three constitutional court judges were due to end after the 25 October election but before the new (eighth) Sejm was seated on 12 November 2015. In advance of the 12 November seating of the eighth Sejm, PO attempted to elect five judges to the Constitutional Tribunal, including two whose terms would begin in the month after 12 November, but the new President Duda refused to let any of them take their oaths of office. After PiS took power, they nominated a different set of five judges who were immediately sworn in. Three [a] were nominated on 2 December 2015 and two others[b] were nominated the following week. Of the five appointments made by PO, the Constitutional Tribunal itself accepted the first three appointments[c] and invalidated the last two.[d] Consequently, of the five appointments made by PiS after the election, the Tribunal accepted the last two PiS appointments[b] and invalidated the first three.[a] As none of the five PO appointments were sworn in by the president, this ruling was disputed by the new PiS government, which went on to change the statutes regulating the Court in order to ensure that all five of its nominees sit, thereby furthering its influence on the court – the only remaining branch of government not under PiS control.

The President of the Constitutional Tribunal dictated that the new five judges should not hear cases until the situation was settled; in order to combat this, PiS passed a series of laws through the Sejm and Senate which compelled the Constitutional Tribunal to allow the judges to hear new cases. The new legislation was signed into law on 28 December. In January 2016, the court ruled the five new judges elected by the 8th Sejm were legally appointed, but in March 2016 ruled the new legislation unconstitutional. The latter ruling was ignored by the Polish government, which considered the ruling "advisory".[1][2] The executive and legislative branches' refusal to accept this ruling of the judicial branch thus caused a constitutional crisis. The crisis provoked outrage in the European Union which began an investigation into Poland under Article 7 of the Treaty on European Union, describing the situation as threatening the rule-of-law.[3][4]

The appointments and amendments caused domestic protests and counter-protests in December and January; one of the most significant outcomes was the creation of the Committee for the Defence of Democracy protest movement.

The law changes were criticized by the European Commission as threatening the "rule of law" and the human rights of Polish citizens.[5][6] As of 20 December 2017, the crisis had, according to the European Commission, extended to include "13 laws affecting the entire structure of the justice system in Poland".[5] These changes to the court system precipitated a wider rule-of-law crisis, causing disagreement with the EU and including rollbacks to abortion in Poland.

The 2023 Polish Parliamentary Election, saw Civic Platform (Platforma Obywatelska, PO) oust PiS from government and come back to power with the help of its coalition partners, starting a reversal of the crisis and conflict with the EU, with the newly found majority in the Sejm a resolution confirming the illegal status of some Constitutional Tribunal justices, and the fact that the President of the Constitutional Tribunal was never properly appointed, was pushed through. Rendering all of the court's rulings since the start of the constitutional crisis null, and allowing state organs to ignore them.[7] This move was met with outcry and accusations of unconstitutionality by the largest opposition party Law and Justice

The European Commission cheered the new government's work, unlocking some funds from the Recovery Package that were blocked because of the old government's attack on the rule of law and suggested that the Article 7 procedure against Poland could be lifted one day.[8]

Events edit

List of TC judges by seniority in June 2015, at the onset of the crisis
No Judge [e] Nomination date End of term
1 Maria Gintowt-Jankowicz   6 November 2006 6 November 2015
2 Wojciech Hermeliński   6 November 2006 6 November 2015
3 Marek Kotlinowski   6 November 2006 6 November 2015
4 Zbigniew Cieślak   2 December 2006 2 December 2015
5 Teresa Liszcz   8 December 2006 8 December 2015
6 Mirosław Granat   27 April 2007 27 April 2016
7 Andrzej Rzepliński (President)   19 December 2007 19 December 2016
8 Stanisław Biernat (vice-president)   26 June 2008 26 June 2017
9 Sławomira Wronkowska-Jaśkiewicz   6 May 2010 6 May 2019
10 Stanisław Rymar   3 December 2010 3 December 2019
11 Piotr Tuleja   3 December 2010 3 December 2019
12 Marek Zubik   3 December 2010 3 December 2019
13 Małgorzata Pyziak-Szafnicka   5 January 2011 5 January 2020
14 Andrzej Wróbel   29 May 2011 29 May 2020
15 Leon Kieres   23 July 2012 23 July 2021
  Nominated by PiS or its coalition partners (2006-2007)
  Nominated by PO or its coalition partners (2007-2015)

Partisan struggle over Court composition edit

The Polish presidential election, held in May 2015, gave candidate Andrzej Duda, backed by Law and Justice (PiS), a surprise victory over incumbent President Bronisław Komorowski, backed by the Civic Platform (PO), which was the then-government's major party.

President-elect Duda was set to take office in August 2015. Coincidentally, a parliamentary election was also due to be held in October. Opinion polls were now showing that PO was likely to lose to PiS.,[10][11] meaning PO could lose both government and Presidency to PiS, within five months.

Judges of the Constitutional Tribunal are nominated by the Lower House, meaning that the partisan influence of the judicial branch was also in play. At the start of the events, 9 of the 15 members had been nominated by PO and its allies during their two terms in government (Tusk Cabinet), while the remaining 6 had been nominated in 2006 and 2007 by PiS and its allies (Kaczyński Cabinet), and they were the most senior: five of them were due to be replaced in late 2015 (see table).

The Constitution mandates that judges are "chosen individually by the Sejm for a term of office of 9 years" (Article 194),[9] but it does not specify what happens when a seat is vacant when the Sejm is itself in recess (during the campaign and before the oaths of office)

The 7th Sejm's session lasted from 8 November 2011 to 11 November 2015, and its last meeting was held on 8–9 October 2015. The election of the 8th Sejm was held on 25 October, and the oaths of office were taken starting 12 November.

First contended nominations by the Civic Platform edit

On 25 June 2015, the PO government and parliament adopted a new law regarding the constitutional court.[12] Later, the Constitutional Tribunal found this law to be partly unconstitutional.[13] It was signed by President Bronisław Komorowski on 21 July 2015 (about one month before end of his presidency).[14]

On 8 October 2015, 17 days before the elections, the outgoing Polish Parliament's last meeting was opened. The Sejm elected five new judges. Three of them replaced judges whose nine-year terms were to expire on 6 November (12 days after the elections, but 5 days before the end of the legislature), while two were to replace judges whose terms were due to expire in December.[15]

The judges were chosen on the basis of a law passed earlier in the summer, by the PO-controlled Sejm.

If the judges appointed by PO had taken their seats on the Tribunal, the result would have been that 14 out of 15 Constitutional Tribunal judges would have been selected by the Civic Platform.[16] However, the new President of Poland, Andrzej Duda, refused to swear in these judges[17] stating that they had been chosen "in contravention of democratic principles".[18]

Second contended nominations by Law and Justice edit

On 25 October, the Law and Justice (Prawo i Sprawiedliwość, PiS) party won an unprecedented absolute majority of seats in the Polish parliamentary election.[19] On 16 November, new Prime Minister Beata Szydło and her Cabinet took office.[20]

On 19 November 2015 the newly-seating 8th Sejm passed an amendment to the existing law, and mandated the appointment of five new judges, set term limits for the president and vice president of the court, and stipulated term limits for two sitting judges. The president, Andrzej Duda, signed the amendment on 20 November, but the law was challenged at the Constitutional Tribunal.[21]

On 2 December, the Sejm elected five new judges to the 15-member tribunal, claiming it would prevent the previously appointed five from taking office;[20] these were sworn into office by President Duda in a closed ceremony held after midnight.[22][23][24][25] PiS delegates argued that the previous appointments made by PO contradicted existing law and the Polish constitution.

On 3 December, the Constitutional Court ruled that out of the five judges elected by PO, the election of the first three judges was valid, while the appointment of the other two breached the law. But President Duda refused to swear any into office.[26] According to his spokesman, Duda refused to swear these three judges into office, because the number of Constitutional Court judges would then be unconstitutional.[19][27][28][29][30][31]

On 4 December, Law and Justice leader Jarosław Kaczyński, who had called the Constitutional Court "the bastion of everything in Poland that is bad"[19] questioned the legitimacy of the Court's decision, because it was supposedly made by fewer judges than required by law. Kaczyński announced changes in the law regarding the Constitutional Court, but gave no details.[32]

On 11 January 2016, the Constitutional Court rejected a complaint by Civic Platform questioning the appointment of the five new judges by the new Parliament.[33] Three of the Court's judges dissented, including Andrzej Rzepliński.[34]

Inclusion of the new judges edit

 
The Constitutional Court in Warsaw

Early in December, the Tribunal's President Andrzej Rzepliński, who had been nominated by PO, said the 5 judges nominated by PiS were given offices in the building, but would not rule until the issue was "cleared up".[1] Because the Polish law set a participatory threshold of 9 judges, this meant that they were de facto excluded.

The Constitution leaves the door open for the specific organization of the Tribunal: "The organization of the Constitutional Tribunal, as well as the mode of proceedings before it, shall be specified by statute." (Article 197)[9]

On 22 December 2015, the Sejm passed a law which re-organized the Constitutional Tribunal:

  • In order to enforce the inclusion of the newly elected judges, the new law introduced the mandatory participation of at least 13, instead of 9, of the 15 judges.[1][35]
  • In order to ensure that the new judges would not be cornered into permanent minority, the new law also set a two-thirds majority.[36] Article 190 (5) of the Polish Constitution requires the "majority" of votes.[37] The new law specifies it to mean a qualified majority.
  • For fear that the new laws passed by the PiS majority would be blocked for years by the Tribunal,[38] the new law binds it to handle the cases according to the date of receipt. Pending constitutional proceedings had previously to wait for six months, or under exceptional circumstances for three months[citation needed].
  • Judges of the Constitutional Tribunal can be dismissed on request of the majority of the Sejm, the President or the Ministry of Justice.[38]

The bill was approved by the Polish Senate on 24 December 2015 after an overnight session, and signed by President Duda on 28 December 2015.[39][40]

The Washington Post quoted an official saying that as a result, the decision-making capacity of the court has been "paralysed".[41]

On 9 March 2016, the Constitutional Tribunal, sitting without the new judges, ruled the amendments non-compliant with the Polish constitution. The Polish government regards this verdict as non-binding, as it was not itself based on the rules introduced by the amendment, and refused to publish the verdict, a binding condition for its legal validity.[42][43]

Domestic reaction edit

 
A pro-government Law and Justice rally in support of the new Constitutional Tribunal legislation, 13 December 2015
 
A demonstration opposing the new Constitutional Tribunal legislation, organized by the Left Together (Razem), Warsaw, 3 December 2015

On 2 December 2015, Jacek Kucharczyk, the director of the Institute of Public Affairs, Poland in Warsaw, was quoted as saying that the constitutional court "was the one branch of government that they (PiS) theoretically couldn't touch and which curbed its power 10 years ago".[20]

On 12 December, protests organised by the Committee for the Defence of Democracy were joined by a crowd of supporters (estimated at 50,000 by the event organisers and 17,000-20,000 according to the official police report) in Warsaw.[44] The next day, pro-government supporters rallied in the capital (estimated at 80,000 by the event organisers and 40,000-45,000 based on the official police report).[45] The Supreme Court of Poland and the Polish Lawyers Association view the amendment as a breach of Article 190 and as unconstitutional.[37]

Lech Wałęsa, former President of Poland and leader of the Solidarity movement in the 1980s, stated that the current situation might lead to a civil war and that the way in which PiS was proceeding did not amount to an "open and democratic" reform process. Wałęsa called for a referendum on the latest changes of law. "This government acts against Poland, against our achievements, freedom, democracy, not to mention the fact that it ridicules us in the world...I'm ashamed to travel abroad."[31][36]

On 5 January 2016, Leszek Miller, a former Prime Minister of Poland criticised Western, especially German, media, and other critics of PiS, saying that they were "hysterical" and that there was nothing to indicate a "coup", as PiS was simply regaining power from the Civic Platform. Miller accused the chief judge of the Constitutional Court Andrzej Rzepliński of acting like a "politician of Civic Platform".[46]

In an open letter published on 25 April 2016, the former Presidents of Poland, Lech Wałęsa, Aleksander Kwaśniewski and Bronisław Komorowski, called on the Polish public to defend democracy, and warned that "Law and Justice plans to continue their actions, which destroy the constitutional order, paralyze the proceedings of the Constitutional Tribunal and the entire judicial system."[47] The same week Poland's Supreme Court announced that it regards the verdicts of the Constitutional Tribunal as binding even though these decisions were not published by the Government, as "technically" required by the Polish Constitution. In response PiS spokeswoman Beata Mazurek called the Supreme Court's statement the result of "a meeting of a team of cronies who are defending the status quo of the previous governing camp."[48]

Confirmation of the illegal status of the Constitutional Tribunal by the X cadency of the Sejm edit

In March 2024, the Sejm passed a resolution confirming the illegal status of some Constitutional Tribunal justices, and the fact that the President of the Constitutional Tribunal was never properly appointed. Rendering all of the court's rulings since the start of the constitutional crisis null, and allowing state organs to ignore them.[7] this move was met with outcry and accusations of unconstitutionality by the Law and Justice party which found itself in opposition after the 2023 parliamentary election.

International reactions edit

Brussels edit

On 15 December 2015, Martin Schulz, President of the European Parliament, described the political situation in Poland as dramatic, with the latest actions of the Polish government having "characteristics of a coup". Schulz explicitly refused to withdraw this appraisal after protests by the Polish Prime Minister Beata Szydło and Minister of Foreign Affairs Witold Waszczykowski.[49] On 10 January 2016, Schulz was quoted as describing the situation in Poland as a "Putinisation" of European politics; and he was backed by Viviane Reding, who complained about attacks on the public and private media in line with "the Putin-Orbán-Kaczynski-Logic".[50]

The European Commission Vice President Frans Timmermans wrote in a letter to Poland's ministers of Justice and Foreign Affairs before Christmas, that the EU's executive body "attaches great importance to preventing the emergence of situations whereby the rule of law in (a) member state could be called into question",[51] and that he "would expect that this law is not finally adopted or at least not put into force until all questions regarding the impact of this law on the independence and the functioning of the Constitutional Tribunal have been fully and properly assessed."[19]

Anne Brasseur, President of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, called on Polish politicians "not to enact, precipitously, legislation relating to the Constitutional Tribunal which may seriously undermine the rule of law."[1]

On 13 January 2016, the European Commission launched a formal rule-of-law assessment to determine a serious threat of a breach of Union law based on rules set out in 2014 and the provisions of Article 7 of the Treaty on European Union, regarding the amendments of the constitutional court and the public media law in Poland. A recommendation, the second step in the rule-of-law assessment, was issued on 1 June 2016.[52][53] Iverna McGowan, director of Amnesty International's European Institutes office in Brussels, commented: "The willingness of the commission to use the rule-of-law framework is a positive step towards a more serious approach by the EU to speak out and hold its own member states to account on their human rights records."[54] Hungary declared that it will oppose any sanctions against Poland.[55]

On 11 March 2016, the Council of Europe's Venice Commission, who had been asked for an opinion by the Polish government in December 2015, assessed the amendments as crippling the Court's effectiveness and undermining democracy, human rights and the rule of law.[56] On 13 April 2016 the European Parliament, by 513 votes to 142 and with 30 abstentions, passed a resolution declaring that the Parliament "is seriously concerned that the effective paralysis of the Constitutional Tribunal in Poland endangers democracy, human rights and the rule of law".[57]

In September 2017, the European Commission launched the second stage of infringement over the state of rule of law in Poland.[58][59][60]

On 20 December 2017, the commission made a fourth recommendation and referred Poland to the European Court of Justice for "breach of EU law", stating,[5]

Over a period of two years, the Polish authorities have adopted more than 13 laws affecting the entire structure of the justice system in Poland, impacting the Constitutional Tribunal, Supreme Court, ordinary courts, National Council for the Judiciary, prosecution service and National School of Judiciary. The common pattern is that the executive and legislative branches have been systematically enabled to politically interfere in the composition, powers, administration and functioning of the judicial branch.

Eastern Europe edit

On 8 January 2016, Viktor Orbán, the Prime Minister of Hungary, declared that Hungary would never agree to any sanctions against Poland, and would veto any proposals to do so in EU. Orbán declared, "The European Union should not think about applying any sort of sanctions against Poland because that would require full unanimity and Hungary will never support any sort of sanctions against Poland".[61] Under current EU law, to sanction any member state, all other member states must give their supporting vote in the European Council. On the same day Tibor Navracsics, the Hungarian EU commissioner, confirmed that Hungary would block any attempts to put Poland under any EU supervision or sanctions, denying claims by the German press that Hungary would allow sanctions to take place.[62]

On 19 January 2016, Petr Mach, Member of the European Parliament for Czech Republic, put on a badge saying "I am a Pole"[63][64][65][66][67] to show his support for law reforms in Poland. He expressed his disappointment with actions taken against Poland and accused the European Commission of hiding its real motivation: "We are faced with a scandalous situation in which the European Union has initiated proceedings against Poland to strip it of its voting rights. Yet, what is the terrible thing that Poland has done? That it has established a two-thirds majority for Constitutional Court decisions? (...) This is, of course, ridiculous and an excuse. What is it really that bothers the European Commission? The European Commission is upset about the fact that the winning party in the Polish election doesn't like the EU in the current form. It doesn't want to accept the dictate of migrant quotas. I think that is what this is about. This is scandalous interference in the internal affairs of a sovereign country. In 1963, John F. Kennedy declared in a Berlin under siege: "Ich bin ein Berliner!". I think that now we need to stand behind Poland. And as a proud free citizen let me say: Jestem Polakiem [I am a Pole]!"[63][64][68]

On 9 March 2018, after Poland's referral to the ECJ, leaders of the Baltic states expressed their support for law reform in Poland.[69] Lithuania's Prime Minister Saulius Skvernelis expressed understanding for law changes in Poland: "we understand Poland, we understand its goals related to the reform of the justice system (...) if there were any restrictive measures imposed on Poland, Lithuania would support Poland". The Prime Minister of Latvia Māris Kučinskis said: "We would be against any punishments imposed on Poland; in this regard, all three Baltic countries think similarly". Estonian Prime Minister Jüri Ratas said that "Any problems related to voting and taking away the right to vote – I do not think that it should happen at all, it would be a step too far".[citation needed]

On 13 September 2018, Lithuanian Foreign Minister, Linas Antanas Linkevičius has re-confirmed Lithuania's stand: "We will oppose the sanctions against Poland. This dialogue is very complicated but we believe that the result will be positive. Our neighbours also want to improve relations with the European Union in the context of the rule of law. Ultimatums and strong reactions will not help to solve this issue".[70]

Western Europe edit

On 9 January, Volker Kauder and Herbert Reul, both leading members of the large German CDU party, called for economic sanctions on Poland.[71] Two days later, the press spokesman for the German government, Steffen Seibert, denied that this was the position of the German government and stated that sanctions were not in fact being considered.[72] German European MP Hans-Olaf Henkel from the fringe conservative Alliance for Progress and Renewal party criticized German interference in Polish internal affairs.[73]

On 10 January, the Polish Foreign Ministry summoned the German ambassador, asking him to explain "anti-Polish statements by German politicians".[74][75]

Washington edit

On 15 January Standard & Poor's downgraded Poland's rating from A− to BBB+ because, according to a S&P spokesman, "the downgrade reflects our view that Poland's system of institutional checks and balances has been eroded significantly. Poland's new government has initiated various legislative measures that we consider weaken the independence and effectiveness of key institutions, as reflected in our institutional assessment."[76] Fitch Ratings reaffirmed Poland's A− rating, stating that Poland's outlook was stable with "strong macro performance, resilient banking system and governance indicators".[77]

In a letter addressed to Beata Szydło, US Senators John McCain, Ben Cardin and Richard J. Durbin protested against the amendments which would "threaten the independence of state media and the country's highest court and undermine Poland's role as a democratic model for other countries in the region still going through difficult transitions" and could "serve to diminish democratic norms, including the rule of law and independence of the judiciary".[78][79]

MEPs edit

On 13 September 2017, Nigel Farage, British populist nationalist politician, openly attacked the European Commission in the EU parliament by saying: "Indeed, the way you are treating Poland and Hungary already must remind them of living under the Soviet Communists with your attempts to tell them how they should run their own countries. All I can say is: Thank God we are leaving! You've learned nothing from Brexit."[80][81][82][83]

On 28 February 2018, British politician Nigel Farage weighed in again on the issue: "I am always hearing about human rights, democracy and the rule of law, and yet in 2011, when journalists in Poland were being apprehended, held and sacked for being critical of the Government, what did the Commission do? Nothing. Why? Well, of course, because Mr Tusk, as the then Prime Minister, was pro the European Union. (...) here you are, Mr Timmermans – just because they tried to clear out the Communist old guard and modernise their system – on the verge of invoking Article 7 and taking away their democratic rights within the Union."[84][85][86] Furthermore, Farage called the case of Catalonia: "And you are happy to interfere, Mr Timmermans, in every single Member State where you think you see an infringement, apart from – I had nearly forgotten – in the case of Catalonia. Nine hundred and fifty people get beaten up by the police because they want to turn out on a Sunday morning and express an opinion – a totally clear violation, Mr Timmermans, of people's human rights, an absolute abuse of any sense of a democratic process – yet you say, in that case, that it is none of our business. But, of course, they are a pro-EU Government, so the iron fist of the European Union is reserved purely for your critics."  He finished with comparison to the Brezhnev Doctrine: "This, for Poland, is the modern-day Brezhnev doctrine of limited sovereignty. You rebelled against that system, Polish people, and I hope you go on and rebel against this one."

Domestic response to German and EU criticism edit

Prime Minister Beata Szydło vowed not to bow to German pressure, saying "these attacks are intended to weaken us, trying to show us that we should agree to everything just like our predecessors did". While German–Polish relations are important, Szydlo pointed out that they must be based on "partnership, not dominance, which our neighbour sometimes tries to exert".[87]

Bishop Wiesław Mering called Schulz's comments a "lost chance to stay quiet" (referring to infamous speech by French President Jacques Chirac telling Poland it "lost the chance to stay quiet" when expressing support for war against Iraq in 2003), "I know my country more than you do, I have lived in my homeland for 70 years, I can assure you that elections of the president and new government, are not evidence of a lack of democracy. Elections showed that our common citizens want change." Mering stated that the problem is in the fact that those who lost power are dissatisfied with the election result and are trying to use the European Parliament in their own interests.[88]

In response to German calls for sanctions on Poland, Law and Justice MP Stanisław Pięta responded, "The people who elected Hitler of their own free will, those who bowed before Stalin (...) want to instruct us", "who today cannot provide safety to their own people", "cannot deal with Islamic terrorism", "They want to give us lessons? Let them not be ridiculous".[89][90]

On 9 January 2016, Polish Minister of Justice Zbigniew Ziobro reacted to the proposal by German politician Günther Oettinger to sanction Poland in a letter criticising Oettinger for interfering in Polish internal affairs, while at the same time tolerating censorship over mass sexual attacks in Germany committed on New Year's Eve.[91] In his reply to Frans Timmermans, Ziobro asked Timmermans "to exercise more restraint in instructing and cautioning the parliament and government of a sovereign and democratic state in the future, despite ideological differences that may exist between us, with you being of a left-wing persuasion."[92]

Paweł Kukiz, the leader of the opposition party Kukiz'15, the third largest party in Poland, stated in reaction to Martin Schulz, "You should pay more attention to democracy in your own country. Because if—God forbid—another Hitler were to appear in your country and lead with him those several million "immigrants" that you are planning, then I suspect the SS will look like the Salvation Army in comparison. I apologise for such a brutal statement, but the Nazis murdered my grandfather in Auschwitz, and I don't want their grandchildren to teach me lessons about democracy."[93]

A special meeting of all Polish parties represented in the Parliament was arranged by Prime Minister Szydlo on 12 January. The parliamentary leader of the Law and Justice Party, Ryszard Terlecki, declared that the meeting would be dedicated to statements by German politicians that have caused outrage among the Polish public, and that he hopes that all other parties will share that sentiment.[94]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Henryk Cioch, Lech Morawski, and Mariusz Muszyński
  2. ^ a b Piotr Pszczółkowski and Julia Przyłębska
  3. ^ Roman Hauser, Krzysztof Ślebzak, and Andrzej Jakubecki
  4. ^ Bronisław Sitek and Andrzej Sokala
  5. ^ The colors only represent the majorities that elected each judge, as the Polish Constitution of 1997 mandates that judges shall be independent and shall not belong to any political party (Article 195).[9]

References edit

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  2. ^ "Polish protests as government rejects court ruling". BBC News. 12 March 2016.
  3. ^ "Commission adopts Rule of Law Opinion on the situation in Poland". European Commission. Retrieved 29 November 2020.
  4. ^ "Bruxelles lance une enquête préliminaire inédite sur la situation de l'Etat de droit en Pologne". Le Monde.fr (in French). 13 January 2016. ISSN 1950-6244. Retrieved 4 December 2016.
  5. ^ a b c European Commission (20 December 2017). "Rule of Law: European Commission acts to defend judicial independence in Poland". Archived from the original on 11 February 2018. Retrieved 11 February 2018.
  6. ^ "Bruxelles lance une enquête préliminaire inédite sur la situation de l'Etat de droit en Pologne". Le Monde.fr (in French). 13 January 2016. ISSN 1950-6244. Retrieved 4 December 2016.
  7. ^ a b "Request Rejected" (PDF).
  8. ^ "Poland starts process of exiting EU's "Article 7" rule-of-law procedure". 20 February 2024.
  9. ^ a b c "The Constitution of the Republic of Poland". Sejm.
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  11. ^ . Newsweek.pl (in Polish). 23 November 2015. Archived from the original on 26 December 2015.
  12. ^ "Spór o TK "katastrofą europejskiego projektu integracyjnego"?". Fakty.Interia.pl. 2 June 2016.
  13. ^ "Trybunał Konstytucyjny: Ustawa o Trybunale Konstytucyjnym". trybunal.gov.pl.
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  16. ^ "Jaki o TK: 14 z 15 sędziów było związanych z PO". Polsat News (in Polish). 4 December 2015.
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  24. ^ Wroński, Paweł (3 December 2015). "Nocne śluby sędziów PiS u prezydenta" [Night oaths of judges of PiS in President's place]. wyborcza.pl (in Polish). Gazeta Wyborcza. Retrieved 30 March 2016.
  25. ^ "Prezydent Andrzej Duda odebrał ślubowanie od sędziów Trybunału Konstytucyjnego" [President Andrzej Duda takes the oath of Constitutional Court judges]. Onet Wiadomości (in Polish). Onet. 3 December 2015. Retrieved 30 March 2016.
  26. ^ . Warsaw Business Journal. 8 December 2015. Archived from the original on 5 January 2016. Retrieved 27 December 2015.
  27. ^ Sobczyk, Martin (26 November 2015). "Poland's Ruling Party Seeks to Replace Judges Who Have Final Say on Laws". The Wall Street Journal.
  28. ^ Szary, Wiktor; Pawlak, Justyna (3 December 2015). "Tussle over judges turns into constitutional crisis in Poland". Reuters.
  29. ^ Scally, Derek (12 December 2015). "Constitutional crisis in Poland intensifies over judicial jobs". The Irish Times.
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External links edit

  • The Constitution of the Republic Of Poland
  • The Venice Commission's Opinion on amendments to the act of 25 June 2015 on the constitutional tribunal of Poland
  • European Parliament resolution of 13 April 2016 on the situation in Poland

polish, constitutional, tribunal, crisis, 2015, ongoing, this, article, about, specific, changes, constitutional, tribunal, wider, crisis, polish, constitutional, crisis, this, article, factual, accuracy, compromised, date, information, reason, given, polish, . This article is about the specific changes to the constitutional tribunal For the wider crisis see Polish constitutional crisis This article s factual accuracy may be compromised due to out of date information The reason given is Polish president signed into law a bill that strikes down a disciplinary chamber for judges in June 2022 a necessary step for Poland to receive over EUR 35 billion in post pandemic recovery funds from the European Union Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information June 2022 The Polish Constitutional Tribunal crisis has been an ongoing political conflict in Poland starting in the second half of 2015 over the appointment of five of the 15 judges of the Constitutional Tribunal A Committee for the Defence of Democracy protest in Warsaw against Poland s new government 12 December 2015 In Poland constitutional judges must be elected by the Lower House and must take an oath of office before the President In 2015 the governing Civic Platform Platforma Obywatelska PO party lost both the presidential election and the parliament Sejm majority to the Law and Justice party Prawo i Sprawiedliwosc PiS which won an unprecedented absolute majority of seats After the new eighth Sejm was seated on 12 November 2015 and the new president of Poland Andrzej Duda assumed office on 6 August 2015 the judicial branch would be left as the only branch of the government of Poland not under the control of PiS provided that the due seat replacements were made in advance The terms of three constitutional court judges were due to end after the 25 October election but before the new eighth Sejm was seated on 12 November 2015 In advance of the 12 November seating of the eighth Sejm PO attempted to elect five judges to the Constitutional Tribunal including two whose terms would begin in the month after 12 November but the new President Duda refused to let any of them take their oaths of office After PiS took power they nominated a different set of five judges who were immediately sworn in Three a were nominated on 2 December 2015 and two others b were nominated the following week Of the five appointments made by PO the Constitutional Tribunal itself accepted the first three appointments c and invalidated the last two d Consequently of the five appointments made by PiS after the election the Tribunal accepted the last two PiS appointments b and invalidated the first three a As none of the five PO appointments were sworn in by the president this ruling was disputed by the new PiS government which went on to change the statutes regulating the Court in order to ensure that all five of its nominees sit thereby furthering its influence on the court the only remaining branch of government not under PiS control The President of the Constitutional Tribunal dictated that the new five judges should not hear cases until the situation was settled in order to combat this PiS passed a series of laws through the Sejm and Senate which compelled the Constitutional Tribunal to allow the judges to hear new cases The new legislation was signed into law on 28 December In January 2016 the court ruled the five new judges elected by the 8th Sejm were legally appointed but in March 2016 ruled the new legislation unconstitutional The latter ruling was ignored by the Polish government which considered the ruling advisory 1 2 The executive and legislative branches refusal to accept this ruling of the judicial branch thus caused a constitutional crisis The crisis provoked outrage in the European Union which began an investigation into Poland under Article 7 of the Treaty on European Union describing the situation as threatening the rule of law 3 4 The appointments and amendments caused domestic protests and counter protests in December and January one of the most significant outcomes was the creation of the Committee for the Defence of Democracy protest movement The law changes were criticized by the European Commission as threatening the rule of law and the human rights of Polish citizens 5 6 As of 20 December 2017 update the crisis had according to the European Commission extended to include 13 laws affecting the entire structure of the justice system in Poland 5 These changes to the court system precipitated a wider rule of law crisis causing disagreement with the EU and including rollbacks to abortion in Poland The 2023 Polish Parliamentary Election saw Civic Platform Platforma Obywatelska PO oust PiS from government and come back to power with the help of its coalition partners starting a reversal of the crisis and conflict with the EU with the newly found majority in the Sejm a resolution confirming the illegal status of some Constitutional Tribunal justices and the fact that the President of the Constitutional Tribunal was never properly appointed was pushed through Rendering all of the court s rulings since the start of the constitutional crisis null and allowing state organs to ignore them 7 This move was met with outcry and accusations of unconstitutionality by the largest opposition party Law and JusticeThe European Commission cheered the new government s work unlocking some funds from the Recovery Package that were blocked because of the old government s attack on the rule of law and suggested that the Article 7 procedure against Poland could be lifted one day 8 Contents 1 Events 1 1 Partisan struggle over Court composition 1 2 First contended nominations by the Civic Platform 1 3 Second contended nominations by Law and Justice 1 4 Inclusion of the new judges 2 Domestic reaction 2 1 Confirmation of the illegal status of the Constitutional Tribunal by the X cadency of the Sejm 3 International reactions 3 1 Brussels 3 2 Eastern Europe 3 3 Western Europe 3 4 Washington 3 5 MEPs 3 6 Domestic response to German and EU criticism 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksEvents editList of TC judges by seniority in June 2015 at the onset of the crisis No Judge e Nomination date End of term 1 Maria Gintowt Jankowicz 6 November 2006 6 November 2015 2 Wojciech Hermelinski 6 November 2006 6 November 2015 3 Marek Kotlinowski 6 November 2006 6 November 2015 4 Zbigniew Cieslak 2 December 2006 2 December 2015 5 Teresa Liszcz 8 December 2006 8 December 2015 6 Miroslaw Granat 27 April 2007 27 April 2016 7 Andrzej Rzeplinski President 19 December 2007 19 December 2016 8 Stanislaw Biernat vice president 26 June 2008 26 June 2017 9 Slawomira Wronkowska Jaskiewicz 6 May 2010 6 May 2019 10 Stanislaw Rymar 3 December 2010 3 December 2019 11 Piotr Tuleja 3 December 2010 3 December 2019 12 Marek Zubik 3 December 2010 3 December 2019 13 Malgorzata Pyziak Szafnicka 5 January 2011 5 January 2020 14 Andrzej Wrobel 29 May 2011 29 May 2020 15 Leon Kieres 23 July 2012 23 July 2021 Nominated by PiS or its coalition partners 2006 2007 Nominated by PO or its coalition partners 2007 2015 Partisan struggle over Court composition edit The Polish presidential election held in May 2015 gave candidate Andrzej Duda backed by Law and Justice PiS a surprise victory over incumbent President Bronislaw Komorowski backed by the Civic Platform PO which was the then government s major party President elect Duda was set to take office in August 2015 Coincidentally a parliamentary election was also due to be held in October Opinion polls were now showing that PO was likely to lose to PiS 10 11 meaning PO could lose both government and Presidency to PiS within five months Judges of the Constitutional Tribunal are nominated by the Lower House meaning that the partisan influence of the judicial branch was also in play At the start of the events 9 of the 15 members had been nominated by PO and its allies during their two terms in government Tusk Cabinet while the remaining 6 had been nominated in 2006 and 2007 by PiS and its allies Kaczynski Cabinet and they were the most senior five of them were due to be replaced in late 2015 see table The Constitution mandates that judges are chosen individually by the Sejm for a term of office of 9 years Article 194 9 but it does not specify what happens when a seat is vacant when the Sejm is itself in recess during the campaign and before the oaths of office The 7th Sejm s session lasted from 8 November 2011 to 11 November 2015 and its last meeting was held on 8 9 October 2015 The election of the 8th Sejm was held on 25 October and the oaths of office were taken starting 12 November First contended nominations by the Civic Platform edit On 25 June 2015 the PO government and parliament adopted a new law regarding the constitutional court 12 Later the Constitutional Tribunal found this law to be partly unconstitutional 13 It was signed by President Bronislaw Komorowski on 21 July 2015 about one month before end of his presidency 14 On 8 October 2015 17 days before the elections the outgoing Polish Parliament s last meeting was opened The Sejm elected five new judges Three of them replaced judges whose nine year terms were to expire on 6 November 12 days after the elections but 5 days before the end of the legislature while two were to replace judges whose terms were due to expire in December 15 The judges were chosen on the basis of a law passed earlier in the summer by the PO controlled Sejm If the judges appointed by PO had taken their seats on the Tribunal the result would have been that 14 out of 15 Constitutional Tribunal judges would have been selected by the Civic Platform 16 However the new President of Poland Andrzej Duda refused to swear in these judges 17 stating that they had been chosen in contravention of democratic principles 18 Second contended nominations by Law and Justice edit On 25 October the Law and Justice Prawo i Sprawiedliwosc PiS party won an unprecedented absolute majority of seats in the Polish parliamentary election 19 On 16 November new Prime Minister Beata Szydlo and her Cabinet took office 20 On 19 November 2015 the newly seating 8th Sejm passed an amendment to the existing law and mandated the appointment of five new judges set term limits for the president and vice president of the court and stipulated term limits for two sitting judges The president Andrzej Duda signed the amendment on 20 November but the law was challenged at the Constitutional Tribunal 21 On 2 December the Sejm elected five new judges to the 15 member tribunal claiming it would prevent the previously appointed five from taking office 20 these were sworn into office by President Duda in a closed ceremony held after midnight 22 23 24 25 PiS delegates argued that the previous appointments made by PO contradicted existing law and the Polish constitution On 3 December the Constitutional Court ruled that out of the five judges elected by PO the election of the first three judges was valid while the appointment of the other two breached the law But President Duda refused to swear any into office 26 According to his spokesman Duda refused to swear these three judges into office because the number of Constitutional Court judges would then be unconstitutional 19 27 28 29 30 31 On 4 December Law and Justice leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski who had called the Constitutional Court the bastion of everything in Poland that is bad 19 questioned the legitimacy of the Court s decision because it was supposedly made by fewer judges than required by law Kaczynski announced changes in the law regarding the Constitutional Court but gave no details 32 On 11 January 2016 the Constitutional Court rejected a complaint by Civic Platform questioning the appointment of the five new judges by the new Parliament 33 Three of the Court s judges dissented including Andrzej Rzeplinski 34 Inclusion of the new judges edit nbsp The Constitutional Court in Warsaw Early in December the Tribunal s President Andrzej Rzeplinski who had been nominated by PO said the 5 judges nominated by PiS were given offices in the building but would not rule until the issue was cleared up 1 Because the Polish law set a participatory threshold of 9 judges this meant that they were de facto excluded The Constitution leaves the door open for the specific organization of the Tribunal The organization of the Constitutional Tribunal as well as the mode of proceedings before it shall be specified by statute Article 197 9 On 22 December 2015 the Sejm passed a law which re organized the Constitutional Tribunal In order to enforce the inclusion of the newly elected judges the new law introduced the mandatory participation of at least 13 instead of 9 of the 15 judges 1 35 In order to ensure that the new judges would not be cornered into permanent minority the new law also set a two thirds majority 36 Article 190 5 of the Polish Constitution requires the majority of votes 37 The new law specifies it to mean a qualified majority For fear that the new laws passed by the PiS majority would be blocked for years by the Tribunal 38 the new law binds it to handle the cases according to the date of receipt Pending constitutional proceedings had previously to wait for six months or under exceptional circumstances for three months citation needed Judges of the Constitutional Tribunal can be dismissed on request of the majority of the Sejm the President or the Ministry of Justice 38 The bill was approved by the Polish Senate on 24 December 2015 after an overnight session and signed by President Duda on 28 December 2015 39 40 The Washington Post quoted an official saying that as a result the decision making capacity of the court has been paralysed 41 On 9 March 2016 the Constitutional Tribunal sitting without the new judges ruled the amendments non compliant with the Polish constitution The Polish government regards this verdict as non binding as it was not itself based on the rules introduced by the amendment and refused to publish the verdict a binding condition for its legal validity 42 43 Domestic reaction edit nbsp A pro government Law and Justice rally in support of the new Constitutional Tribunal legislation 13 December 2015 nbsp A demonstration opposing the new Constitutional Tribunal legislation organized by the Left Together Razem Warsaw 3 December 2015 On 2 December 2015 Jacek Kucharczyk the director of the Institute of Public Affairs Poland in Warsaw was quoted as saying that the constitutional court was the one branch of government that they PiS theoretically couldn t touch and which curbed its power 10 years ago 20 On 12 December protests organised by the Committee for the Defence of Democracy were joined by a crowd of supporters estimated at 50 000 by the event organisers and 17 000 20 000 according to the official police report in Warsaw 44 The next day pro government supporters rallied in the capital estimated at 80 000 by the event organisers and 40 000 45 000 based on the official police report 45 The Supreme Court of Poland and the Polish Lawyers Association view the amendment as a breach of Article 190 and as unconstitutional 37 Lech Walesa former President of Poland and leader of the Solidarity movement in the 1980s stated that the current situation might lead to a civil war and that the way in which PiS was proceeding did not amount to an open and democratic reform process Walesa called for a referendum on the latest changes of law This government acts against Poland against our achievements freedom democracy not to mention the fact that it ridicules us in the world I m ashamed to travel abroad 31 36 On 5 January 2016 Leszek Miller a former Prime Minister of Poland criticised Western especially German media and other critics of PiS saying that they were hysterical and that there was nothing to indicate a coup as PiS was simply regaining power from the Civic Platform Miller accused the chief judge of the Constitutional Court Andrzej Rzeplinski of acting like a politician of Civic Platform 46 In an open letter published on 25 April 2016 the former Presidents of Poland Lech Walesa Aleksander Kwasniewski and Bronislaw Komorowski called on the Polish public to defend democracy and warned that Law and Justice plans to continue their actions which destroy the constitutional order paralyze the proceedings of the Constitutional Tribunal and the entire judicial system 47 The same week Poland s Supreme Court announced that it regards the verdicts of the Constitutional Tribunal as binding even though these decisions were not published by the Government as technically required by the Polish Constitution In response PiS spokeswoman Beata Mazurek called the Supreme Court s statement the result of a meeting of a team of cronies who are defending the status quo of the previous governing camp 48 Confirmation of the illegal status of the Constitutional Tribunal by the X cadency of the Sejm edit In March 2024 the Sejm passed a resolution confirming the illegal status of some Constitutional Tribunal justices and the fact that the President of the Constitutional Tribunal was never properly appointed Rendering all of the court s rulings since the start of the constitutional crisis null and allowing state organs to ignore them 7 this move was met with outcry and accusations of unconstitutionality by the Law and Justice party which found itself in opposition after the 2023 parliamentary election International reactions editBrussels edit On 15 December 2015 Martin Schulz President of the European Parliament described the political situation in Poland as dramatic with the latest actions of the Polish government having characteristics of a coup Schulz explicitly refused to withdraw this appraisal after protests by the Polish Prime Minister Beata Szydlo and Minister of Foreign Affairs Witold Waszczykowski 49 On 10 January 2016 Schulz was quoted as describing the situation in Poland as a Putinisation of European politics and he was backed by Viviane Reding who complained about attacks on the public and private media in line with the Putin Orban Kaczynski Logic 50 The European Commission Vice President Frans Timmermans wrote in a letter to Poland s ministers of Justice and Foreign Affairs before Christmas that the EU s executive body attaches great importance to preventing the emergence of situations whereby the rule of law in a member state could be called into question 51 and that he would expect that this law is not finally adopted or at least not put into force until all questions regarding the impact of this law on the independence and the functioning of the Constitutional Tribunal have been fully and properly assessed 19 Anne Brasseur President of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe called on Polish politicians not to enact precipitously legislation relating to the Constitutional Tribunal which may seriously undermine the rule of law 1 On 13 January 2016 the European Commission launched a formal rule of law assessment to determine a serious threat of a breach of Union law based on rules set out in 2014 and the provisions of Article 7 of the Treaty on European Union regarding the amendments of the constitutional court and the public media law in Poland A recommendation the second step in the rule of law assessment was issued on 1 June 2016 52 53 Iverna McGowan director of Amnesty International s European Institutes office in Brussels commented The willingness of the commission to use the rule of law framework is a positive step towards a more serious approach by the EU to speak out and hold its own member states to account on their human rights records 54 Hungary declared that it will oppose any sanctions against Poland 55 On 11 March 2016 the Council of Europe s Venice Commission who had been asked for an opinion by the Polish government in December 2015 assessed the amendments as crippling the Court s effectiveness and undermining democracy human rights and the rule of law 56 On 13 April 2016 the European Parliament by 513 votes to 142 and with 30 abstentions passed a resolution declaring that the Parliament is seriously concerned that the effective paralysis of the Constitutional Tribunal in Poland endangers democracy human rights and the rule of law 57 In September 2017 the European Commission launched the second stage of infringement over the state of rule of law in Poland 58 59 60 On 20 December 2017 the commission made a fourth recommendation and referred Poland to the European Court of Justice for breach of EU law stating 5 Over a period of two years the Polish authorities have adopted more than 13 laws affecting the entire structure of the justice system in Poland impacting the Constitutional Tribunal Supreme Court ordinary courts National Council for the Judiciary prosecution service and National School of Judiciary The common pattern is that the executive and legislative branches have been systematically enabled to politically interfere in the composition powers administration and functioning of the judicial branch European Commission Eastern Europe edit On 8 January 2016 Viktor Orban the Prime Minister of Hungary declared that Hungary would never agree to any sanctions against Poland and would veto any proposals to do so in EU Orban declared The European Union should not think about applying any sort of sanctions against Poland because that would require full unanimity and Hungary will never support any sort of sanctions against Poland 61 Under current EU law to sanction any member state all other member states must give their supporting vote in the European Council On the same day Tibor Navracsics the Hungarian EU commissioner confirmed that Hungary would block any attempts to put Poland under any EU supervision or sanctions denying claims by the German press that Hungary would allow sanctions to take place 62 On 19 January 2016 Petr Mach Member of the European Parliament for Czech Republic put on a badge saying I am a Pole 63 64 65 66 67 to show his support for law reforms in Poland He expressed his disappointment with actions taken against Poland and accused the European Commission of hiding its real motivation We are faced with a scandalous situation in which the European Union has initiated proceedings against Poland to strip it of its voting rights Yet what is the terrible thing that Poland has done That it has established a two thirds majority for Constitutional Court decisions This is of course ridiculous and an excuse What is it really that bothers the European Commission The European Commission is upset about the fact that the winning party in the Polish election doesn t like the EU in the current form It doesn t want to accept the dictate of migrant quotas I think that is what this is about This is scandalous interference in the internal affairs of a sovereign country In 1963 John F Kennedy declared in a Berlin under siege Ich bin ein Berliner I think that now we need to stand behind Poland And as a proud free citizen let me say Jestem Polakiem I am a Pole 63 64 68 On 9 March 2018 after Poland s referral to the ECJ leaders of the Baltic states expressed their support for law reform in Poland 69 Lithuania s Prime Minister Saulius Skvernelis expressed understanding for law changes in Poland we understand Poland we understand its goals related to the reform of the justice system if there were any restrictive measures imposed on Poland Lithuania would support Poland The Prime Minister of Latvia Maris Kucinskis said We would be against any punishments imposed on Poland in this regard all three Baltic countries think similarly Estonian Prime Minister Juri Ratas said that Any problems related to voting and taking away the right to vote I do not think that it should happen at all it would be a step too far citation needed On 13 September 2018 Lithuanian Foreign Minister Linas Antanas Linkevicius has re confirmed Lithuania s stand We will oppose the sanctions against Poland This dialogue is very complicated but we believe that the result will be positive Our neighbours also want to improve relations with the European Union in the context of the rule of law Ultimatums and strong reactions will not help to solve this issue 70 Western Europe edit On 9 January Volker Kauder and Herbert Reul both leading members of the large German CDU party called for economic sanctions on Poland 71 Two days later the press spokesman for the German government Steffen Seibert denied that this was the position of the German government and stated that sanctions were not in fact being considered 72 German European MP Hans Olaf Henkel from the fringe conservative Alliance for Progress and Renewal party criticized German interference in Polish internal affairs 73 On 10 January the Polish Foreign Ministry summoned the German ambassador asking him to explain anti Polish statements by German politicians 74 75 Washington edit On 15 January Standard amp Poor s downgraded Poland s rating from A to BBB because according to a S amp P spokesman the downgrade reflects our view that Poland s system of institutional checks and balances has been eroded significantly Poland s new government has initiated various legislative measures that we consider weaken the independence and effectiveness of key institutions as reflected in our institutional assessment 76 Fitch Ratings reaffirmed Poland s A rating stating that Poland s outlook was stable with strong macro performance resilient banking system and governance indicators 77 In a letter addressed to Beata Szydlo US Senators John McCain Ben Cardin and Richard J Durbin protested against the amendments which would threaten the independence of state media and the country s highest court and undermine Poland s role as a democratic model for other countries in the region still going through difficult transitions and could serve to diminish democratic norms including the rule of law and independence of the judiciary 78 79 MEPs edit On 13 September 2017 Nigel Farage British populist nationalist politician openly attacked the European Commission in the EU parliament by saying Indeed the way you are treating Poland and Hungary already must remind them of living under the Soviet Communists with your attempts to tell them how they should run their own countries All I can say is Thank God we are leaving You ve learned nothing from Brexit 80 81 82 83 On 28 February 2018 British politician Nigel Farage weighed in again on the issue I am always hearing about human rights democracy and the rule of law and yet in 2011 when journalists in Poland were being apprehended held and sacked for being critical of the Government what did the Commission do Nothing Why Well of course because Mr Tusk as the then Prime Minister was pro the European Union here you are Mr Timmermans just because they tried to clear out the Communist old guard and modernise their system on the verge of invoking Article 7 and taking away their democratic rights within the Union 84 85 86 Furthermore Farage called the case of Catalonia And you are happy to interfere Mr Timmermans in every single Member State where you think you see an infringement apart from I had nearly forgotten in the case of Catalonia Nine hundred and fifty people get beaten up by the police because they want to turn out on a Sunday morning and express an opinion a totally clear violation Mr Timmermans of people s human rights an absolute abuse of any sense of a democratic process yet you say in that case that it is none of our business But of course they are a pro EU Government so the iron fist of the European Union is reserved purely for your critics He finished with comparison to the Brezhnev Doctrine This for Poland is the modern day Brezhnev doctrine of limited sovereignty You rebelled against that system Polish people and I hope you go on and rebel against this one Domestic response to German and EU criticism edit Prime Minister Beata Szydlo vowed not to bow to German pressure saying these attacks are intended to weaken us trying to show us that we should agree to everything just like our predecessors did While German Polish relations are important Szydlo pointed out that they must be based on partnership not dominance which our neighbour sometimes tries to exert 87 Bishop Wieslaw Mering called Schulz s comments a lost chance to stay quiet referring to infamous speech by French President Jacques Chirac telling Poland it lost the chance to stay quiet when expressing support for war against Iraq in 2003 I know my country more than you do I have lived in my homeland for 70 years I can assure you that elections of the president and new government are not evidence of a lack of democracy Elections showed that our common citizens want change Mering stated that the problem is in the fact that those who lost power are dissatisfied with the election result and are trying to use the European Parliament in their own interests 88 In response to German calls for sanctions on Poland Law and Justice MP Stanislaw Pieta responded The people who elected Hitler of their own free will those who bowed before Stalin want to instruct us who today cannot provide safety to their own people cannot deal with Islamic terrorism They want to give us lessons Let them not be ridiculous 89 90 On 9 January 2016 Polish Minister of Justice Zbigniew Ziobro reacted to the proposal by German politician Gunther Oettinger to sanction Poland in a letter criticising Oettinger for interfering in Polish internal affairs while at the same time tolerating censorship over mass sexual attacks in Germany committed on New Year s Eve 91 In his reply to Frans Timmermans Ziobro asked Timmermans to exercise more restraint in instructing and cautioning the parliament and government of a sovereign and democratic state in the future despite ideological differences that may exist between us with you being of a left wing persuasion 92 Pawel Kukiz the leader of the opposition party Kukiz 15 the third largest party in Poland stated in reaction to Martin Schulz You should pay more attention to democracy in your own country Because if God forbid another Hitler were to appear in your country and lead with him those several million immigrants that you are planning then I suspect the SS will look like the Salvation Army in comparison I apologise for such a brutal statement but the Nazis murdered my grandfather in Auschwitz and I don t want their grandchildren to teach me lessons about democracy 93 A special meeting of all Polish parties represented in the Parliament was arranged by Prime Minister Szydlo on 12 January The parliamentary leader of the Law and Justice Party Ryszard Terlecki declared that the meeting would be dedicated to statements by German politicians that have caused outrage among the Polish public and that he hopes that all other parties will share that sentiment 94 See also editDemocratic backsliding Polish constitutional crisis Polish Supreme Court Disciplinary Chamber law Protests against Polish judiciary reforms Committee for the Defence of Democracy Citizens of Poland movement Constitution of Hungary History of Poland 1989 present List of political parties in Poland List of Polish politicians Politics of Poland 2015 Polish presidential election 2015 Polish parliamentary electionNotes edit a b Henryk Cioch Lech Morawski and Mariusz Muszynski a b Piotr Pszczolkowski and Julia Przylebska Roman Hauser Krzysztof Slebzak and Andrzej Jakubecki Bronislaw Sitek and Andrzej Sokala The colors only represent the majorities that elected each judge as the Polish Constitution of 1997 mandates that judges shall be independent and shall not belong to any political party Article 195 9 References edit a b c d Goettig Marcin 22 December 2015 Polish parliament passes contentious amendment to top court law Reuters Polish protests as government rejects court ruling BBC News 12 March 2016 Commission adopts Rule of Law Opinion on the situation in Poland European Commission Retrieved 29 November 2020 Bruxelles lance une enquete preliminaire inedite sur la situation de l Etat de droit en Pologne Le Monde fr in French 13 January 2016 ISSN 1950 6244 Retrieved 4 December 2016 a b c European Commission 20 December 2017 Rule of Law European Commission acts to defend judicial independence in Poland Archived from the original on 11 February 2018 Retrieved 11 February 2018 Bruxelles lance une enquete preliminaire inedite sur la situation de l Etat de droit en Pologne Le Monde fr in French 13 January 2016 ISSN 1950 6244 Retrieved 4 December 2016 a b Request Rejected PDF Poland starts process of exiting EU s Article 7 rule of law procedure 20 February 2024 a b c The Constitution of the Republic of Poland Sejm Awantura o Trybunal Konstytucyjny Fakt pl 26 November 2015 Ustawa PiS o Trybunale Konstytucyjnym zaskarzona do Trybunalu Konstytucyjnego Newsweek pl in Polish 23 November 2015 Archived from the original on 26 December 2015 Spor o TK katastrofa europejskiego projektu integracyjnego Fakty Interia pl 2 June 2016 Trybunal Konstytucyjny Ustawa o Trybunale Konstytucyjnym trybunal gov pl Prezydent podpisal ustawe o Trybunale Konstytucyjnym Obserwator Konstytucyjny 22 July 2015 Wygasaja kadencje trojga sedziow Trybunalu Konstytucyjnego Rp pl in Polish 6 November 2015 Jaki o TK 14 z 15 sedziow bylo zwiazanych z PO Polsat News in Polish 4 December 2015 Szczerbiak Aleks 31 December 2015 Who is winning Poland s constitutional tribunal war The Polish Politics Blog PO apeluje do Dudy o zaprzysiezenie sedziow Trybunalu Konstytucyjnego Polsat News in Polish 16 November 2015 a b c d Cienski Jan 24 December 2015 Poland s constitutional crisis goes international Politico a b c Gera Vanessa 2 December 2015 New Polish government sparks constitutional crisis The Salt Lake Tribune Associated Press Retrieved 22 January 2015 Prezydent Andrzej Duda podpisal nowelizacje ustawy o Trybunale Konstytucyjnym Wejdzie w zycie 5 grudnia PolskieRadio pl in Polish 20 November 2015 Retrieved 14 January 2016 Kisilowski Maciej 8 December 2015 Poland s overnight court breaks all the rules POLITICO Retrieved 30 March 2016 Weymouth Lally 24 March 2016 Is Poland taking an authoritarian turn Its new president explains The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Archived from the original on 28 March 2016 Retrieved 30 March 2016 Wronski Pawel 3 December 2015 Nocne sluby sedziow PiS u prezydenta Night oaths of judges of PiS in President s place wyborcza pl in Polish Gazeta Wyborcza Retrieved 30 March 2016 Prezydent Andrzej Duda odebral slubowanie od sedziow Trybunalu Konstytucyjnego President Andrzej Duda takes the oath of Constitutional Court judges Onet Wiadomosci in Polish Onet 3 December 2015 Retrieved 30 March 2016 President Duda won t implement constitutional tribunal ruling Warsaw Business Journal 8 December 2015 Archived from the original on 5 January 2016 Retrieved 27 December 2015 Sobczyk Martin 26 November 2015 Poland s Ruling Party Seeks to Replace Judges Who Have Final Say on Laws The Wall Street Journal Szary Wiktor Pawlak Justyna 3 December 2015 Tussle over judges turns into constitutional crisis in Poland Reuters Scally Derek 12 December 2015 Constitutional crisis in Poland intensifies over judicial jobs The Irish Times Poland s new right wing leaders have crossed a line The Washington Post 22 December 2015 Archived from the original on 23 December 2015 a b Polish government policies risk civil war former leader Walesa says Deutsche Welle 18 December 2015 Sobczyk Martin 14 December 2015 Battle Between Polish Government and Top Court Escalates The Wall Street Journal Sklodowski Tomasz 11 January 2016 Trybunal Konstytucyjny umorzyl skarge na uchwaly Sejmu Portal I pl Retrieved 14 January 2016 Trybunal Konstytucyjny umorzyl sprawe dot powolania 5 sedziow Fakty interia pl Retrieved 14 January 2016 Projekt nowalizacji ustawy o TK w Sejmie Tvn24 pl 16 December 2015 Retrieved 14 January 2016 a b Poland Lech Walesa warns against undemocratic curbs on court The Guardian 23 December 2015 a b Baumann Meret 21 December 2015 In Polen wachst der Widerstand Neue Zurcher Zeitung in German a b Fluckiger Paul 23 December 2015 Regierung in Polen entmachtet Verfassungsgericht in German Tagesspiegel Poland s senate votes to curb power of top court The Guardian 24 December 2015 Poland s president signs constitutional court bill amendment Deutsche Welle 28 December 2015 Vanessa Gera Rights official Poland s constitutional court paralyzed Associated Press The Washington Post 12 February 2016 retrieved 25 February 2016 Poland s legal reforms do not comply with constitution court rules The Guardian 9 March 2016 Polish protests as government rejects court ruling BBC News 12 March 2016 Szary Wiktor Florkiewicz Pawel 12 December 2015 Thousands march against Polish government as constitutional spat drags on Reuters Polskie Radio Freedom and Solidarity March Miller PiS nie dokonuje zamachu stanu Zachodnie media histeryzuja Tvn24 pl 5 January 2016 Retrieved 14 January 2016 Ex Presidents of Poland Issue a Rebuke to the Governing Party The New York Times 25 April 2016 Pressure Mounts on Polish Government Over Top Court The Wall Street Journal 29 April 2016 Day Mathew 15 December 2015 EU parliament head refuses to apologise over coup comment after Polish PM request The Daily Telegraph Gutschker Thomas 10 January 2016 Das ist gelenkte Demokratie nach Putins Art Faz net in German Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung EU warns Poland on rule of law as constitutional crisis escalates Deutsche Welle 24 December 2015 Commission Opinion on the Rule of Law in Poland and the Rule of Law Framework Questions amp Answers Press release European Commission 1 June 2016 Poland gets official warning from EU over constitutional court changes The Guardian 1 June 2016 EU begins assessment of Poland over controversial new laws The Irish Times 13 January 2016 dmilo k 14 January 2016 Blaszczak zadne sankcje na Polske nie zostana nalozone Warsaw Business Journal 11 March 2016 Venice Commission criticizes changes to top constitutional court Archived from the original on 12 March 2016 Retrieved 16 March 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help EU accuses Polish Government of undermining Democracy The New York Times 13 April 2016 Poland court paralysis threatens democracy Reuters 13 April 2016 Independence of the judiciary European Commission takes second step in infringement procedure against Poland thefad pl 12 September 2017 EU escalates pressure on Poland over rule of law thenews pl 13 September 2017 Rule of law procedure for Poland European Commission takes another step hfhr pl 22 December 2017 Orban promises to veto any EU sanctions against Poland Financial Times 8 January 2016 Archived from the original on 11 January 2016 Retrieved 8 January 2016 Wegierski komisarz Jestem przeciw specjalnej procedurze wobec Polski Dziennik pl 11 January 2016 Retrieved 14 January 2016 a b YouTube www youtube com Retrieved 19 January 2016 a b YouTube www youtube com Retrieved 20 January 2016 Sunday Catholic Magazine sunday niedziela pl Retrieved 14 January 2016 Petr Mach skandaliczna ingerencja w wewnetrzne sprawy Polski RadioMaryja pl in Polish 19 January 2016 Retrieved 19 January 2016 Piejko Magdalena 20 January 2016 Jestem Polakiem bylo wyrazem solidarnosci mowi niezalezna pl Petr Mach z Czech niezalezna pl in Polish Retrieved 20 January 2016 Debates Tuesday 19 January 2016 Situation in Poland debate europarl europa eu Retrieved 19 January 2016 Baltic states against EU sanctions on Poland EURACTIV com www euractiv com 13 March 2018 UAWire Lithuania promises not support the EU sanctions against Poland uawire org 14 September 2018 Gremi Business Communication Sp z o o 20 December 2015 Partia Merkel zirytowana dzialaniami PiS Polityka Rp pl Retrieved 14 January 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help Niemcy nie rozwazaja nalozenia na Polske sankcji Tvn24 pl Retrieved 14 January 2016 Eurodeputowany Hans Olaf Henkel Polacy nie potrzebuja dobrych rad Niemcow Urzadzajac nagonke na PiS niemieccy chadecy wspieraja PO swojego politycznego sojusznika NASZ WYWIAD Wpolityce pl 4 January 2016 Retrieved 14 January 2016 Ambasador Niemiec wezwany przez Witolda Waszczykowskiego Wiadomosci Wiadomosci onet pl 9 January 2016 Retrieved 14 January 2016 Ambasador Niemiec w MSZ Problemy z komunikacja miedzy Polska a Niemcami Wiadomosci Polskieradio pl Retrieved 14 January 2016 Foy Henry 15 January 2016 S amp P downgrades Poland s rating as radical policies cause concerns Financial Times Piotr Skolimowski 15 January 2016 Polish Rating Cut for First Time as S amp P Warns on Power Grab Bloomberg com Vanessa Gera 9 March 2016 Polish constitutional court strikes down new rules on court The Washington Post Archived from the original on 10 March 2016 U S senators urge Poland to respect democracy rule of law Reuters 14 February 2016 Debates Wednesday 13 September 2017 State of the Union debate www europarl europa eu 13 September 2017 Nigel Farage and Juncker bash heads in EU parliament www devere group com 13 September 2017 Brexit latest The way you re treating Hungary amp Poland Farage SHAMES Juncker UK News Express co uk www express co uk 13 September 2017 Farage EU treatment of Hungary and Poland must remind them of Communist Soviet Union Westmonster www westmonster com 13 September 2017 Debates Wednesday 28 February 2018 Commission decision to activate Article 7 1 TEU as regards the situation in Poland debate www europarl europa eu 28 February 2018 YouTube www youtube com 28 February 2018 I hope the Polish people continue to rebel against the EU The bully boys in Brussels want to take away their democratic rights within the Union twitter com 6 March 2018 Szydlo Nie ugniemy sie pod presja Bankier pl 9 January 2016 Retrieved 14 January 2016 Bp Mering pisze do Schulza Stracil pan okazje by siedziec cicho Wyborcza pl in Polish 7 January 2016 Retrieved 14 January 2016 Pieta Czego Niemcy moga nas nauczyc Kiedys wybrali Hitlera dzis nie potrafia zapewnic bezpieczenstwa swoim obywatelom Telewizja Republika Telewizjarepublika pl Retrieved 14 January 2016 Stanislaw Pieta Pouczaja nas ludzie ktorzy wybrali Hitlera Dzikikraj interia pl Retrieved 14 January 2016 Zbigniew Ziobro w liscie otwartym do komisarza Guenthera Oettingera Wyborcza pl Archived from the original on 11 January 2016 Retrieved 14 January 2016 New Polish Government Faces E U Investigation NYT 13 January 2016 Kukiz nazisci zamordowali mi Dziadka w Auschwitz wiec nie zycze sobie by ich wnuki uczyly mnie demokracji Wprost 9 January 2016 Retrieved 14 January 2016 Beata Szydlo zwolala na dzis spotkanie ws polityki zagranicznej Wiadomosci Polskieradio pl Retrieved 14 January 2016 External links editThe Constitution of the Republic Of Poland The Venice Commission s Opinion on amendments to the act of 25 June 2015 on the constitutional tribunal of Poland European Parliament resolution of 13 April 2016 on the situation in Poland Portals nbsp Poland nbsp Politics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Polish Constitutional Tribunal crisis 2015 ongoing amp oldid 1220966241, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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