fbpx
Wikipedia

Constitutional Tribunal (Poland)

The Constitutional Tribunal (Polish: Trybunał Konstytucyjny) is the constitutional court of the Republic of Poland, a judicial body established to resolve disputes on the constitutionality of the activities of state institutions; its main task is to supervise the compliance of statutory law with the Constitution of the Republic of Poland.

Constitutional Tribunal
Trybunał Konstytucyjny
Established
  • 26 March 1982; 42 years ago (1982-03-26) – constitutional amendment establishing the Tribunal
  • 1986 – beginning of the activity
LocationWarsaw, Poland
Composition methodPrime minister's nomination with Sejm confirmation.
President and Vice President appointed by the President of Poland.
Authorized byConstitution of the Republic of Poland
Judge term length9 years, one term only
Number of positions15
LanguagePolish
Websitewww.trybunal.gov.pl
President
CurrentlyJulia Przyłębska Over-Term
Since21 December 2016[a]
Vice President
Currentlydr hab. Mariusz Muszyński
Since5 July 2017
The seat of the Tribunal, Warsaw
The seat of the Tribunal, Warsaw (2006)

Its creation was a request of the Solidarity movement following its 1981 National Congress that took place a few weeks before the introduction of martial law.[1] The Tribunal was established on 26 March 1982 and judges took office on 1 January 1986.

The tribunal's powers increased in 1989 with the transition to the capitalist Third Polish Republic and in 1997 with the establishment of a new Constitution.[2] The Constitution mandates that its 15 members are elected by the Sejm, the lower house, for 9 years. It is the subject of an appointment crisis since 2015.

It should not be confused with the Supreme Court of Poland.

Powers edit

The Constitutional Tribunal adjudicates on the compliance with the Constitution of legislation and international agreements (also their ratification), on disputes over the powers of central constitutional bodies, and on compliance with the Constitution of the aims and activities of political parties. It also rules on constitutional complaints.[citation needed]

Composition edit

The Constitutional Tribunal is made up of 15 judges chosen by the Sejm RP (the lower house of parliament) for single nine-year terms. The Constitutional Tribunal constitutes one of the formal guarantees of a state grounded on the rule of law.[citation needed]

History edit

1982–1989: People's Republic of Poland edit

The Constitutional Tribunal was established by the amendment of the Constitution of the People's Republic of Poland on 26 March 1982.[1] Due to the brevity of the introduced article 33a, it was decided that a law must be brought forth that would outline the proceedings of the Constitutional Tribunal.[3] This became an intricate process with 15 drafts developed, and the final act was ratified by the Sejm on 29 April 1985 which allowed for the formal commencement of the Tribunal's judicial proceedings on 1 January 1986.[3] But the courts competence and judicial capacity were limited at this time, as all rulings on the constitutionality of bills could be dismissed by a 2/3 majority vote in the Sejm.[2] This in effect would place the rulings in an indefinite moratorium as these votes rarely occurred.[2]

On 24 January 1986 the first motion, reference U 1/86, was brought before the Constitutional Tribunal on behalf of the Presidium of the Provincial National Council in Wrocław.[3] The claimants sought to contend two paragraphs of the Ordinance of the Council of Ministers in regard to the sale of state property and the procedures and costs related to it as unconstitutional.[3] In opposition to the government's stance, the court ruled in a 3-member panel on 28 May 1986 that the introduced paragraphs were unconstitutional.[3] The Council of Ministers called for a reevaluation of the case, but on 5 November 1986 the Constitutional Tribunal upheld its ruling.[3]

1989–2014: Third Polish Republic edit

In 1989 the Constitutional Tribunal's powers expanded as it secured the right to universally decide on the binding interpretation of laws.[2] Many changes came with the enactment of the 1997 Constitution; the number of judges increased from 12 to 15, terms of office were elongated by 1 year for a total of 9 years, and the Tribunal lost its competence to decide the interpretation of legal statutes (in the form of abstract provisions).[2]

2015–2016: Polish Constitutional Court crisis edit

 
Demonstration organized by the KOD, 18 December 2016

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.

Before the new president of Poland, Andrzej Duda, assumed office on 6 August 2015, and the new (eighth) Sejm was seated on 12 November 2015, the PO majority attempted to nominate enough judges so that the judicial branch would not quickly fall under the control of PiS.

In 2015, 5 of the 15 seats were due to be replaced. Three terms were due to end during the Sejm's recess (after the 25 October election but before the eighth Sejm was seated on 12 November). Two others were due for early December.

PO attempted to nominate all five seats due to be vacant in the year 2015 in advance. In June 2015, they enacted a provision in which it sought to transfer such power to the Sejm.[4] Then on 8 October 2015, two weeks before the election, the Sejm elected these 5 judges. The new President Duda refused to let any of them take their oaths of office. After PiS won the elections and a majority of seats, they nominated a different set of five judges who were immediately sworn in.

This ignited a fierce partisan struggle, as the remaining judges in the Tribunal, most of which had been nominated by PO majorities, ruled out 3 of the 5 PiS nominees, validating instead 3 PO nominees,[4] with the 3 PiS judges sworn in not allowed to hear cases.

As a result, a law was immediately passed by the PiS majority to force the inclusion of its nominees, sparking protests and foreign statements of either hostility or support. As this was not enough, a total of 6 "remedial bills" devised by PiS were enacted in the 2015-2016 period.[4] A two-thirds majority was instated, diluting partisan influence. Finally, the term of resisting President Rzepliński ended and on 21 December 2016, President Andrzej Duda appointed junior member Julia Przyłębska as President of the Constitutional Tribunal.

 
The Grand Courtroom, in which the Court adjudicates in its full composition
 
Presidents and Vice-Presidents of the Constitutional Tribunal from 2006 to 2016. Marek Mazurkiewicz, Andrzej Mączyński, Janusz Niemcewicz, Jerzy Stępień, Bohdan Zdziennicki i Andrzej Rzepliński (2010)

Since the reform and takeover of the Constitutional Tribunal by the Law and Justice, the independence and sovereignty of the institution has been questioned. It was called a "puppet court" by Polish opposition judges' associations, some foreign judicial organisations and constitutionalist counterparts.[5][6][7][8] In February 2020, former Constitutional Tribunal judges, including former presidents of the tribunal Andrzej Rzepliński, Marek Safjan [pl], Jerzy Stępień [pl], Bohdan Zdziennicki [pl] and Andrzej Zoll, stated,

We, the undersigned retired judges of the Constitutional Tribunal, regret to state that the actions of the legislature and the executive since 2015, and the Constitutional Tribunal leadership since 2017, have led to a dramatic decline in the significance and the prestige of this constitutional body, as well as to the inability to perform its constitutional tasks and duties. Unfortunately, the widespread belief that the Constitutional Tribunal has virtually been abolished is correct.

— former Constitutional Tribunal judges, Ruleoflaw.pl[9]

PiS having been reelected to the Sejm in 2019, and the PiS-affiliated Andrzej Duda being reelected as preisdent in 2020, they were able to fill the Court's 15 seats completely by 2021.

On 4 March 2024, following a non-PiS government being elected in October 2023 and formally sworn in on 13 December 2023, a package of measures was announced with the aim of reforming the Tribunal. The measures included a prospective Sejm resolution calling on illegitimately appointed judges to resign voluntarily and branding Julia Przyłębska as not being authorised to be the Tribunal's chief justice (Przyłębska having been sworn in by Duda in December 2016 without the required resolution being issued by the general assembly of Tribunal judges, and being believed by a number of legal experts to have sat completely illegitimately since December 2022[a]), prospective legislation to alter selection procedures (requiring candidates to take part in an open public hearing and to receive the approval of three fifths of MPs) and eligibility (anyone who has been an active politician within the last four years, including even being a member of a political party, would not be eligible to sit on the Tribunal; any politician who did get selected would not be able to rule on cases relating to legislation that they had been involved with within the last ten years), and prospective constitutional changes to allow for the implementation of the measures.[10]

Landmark decisions edit

Case K 1/20 edit

The Tribunal received a referral by 119 MPs on whether or not abortions of pregnancies unrelated to rape or not threatening the mother's life, which they call "eugenic", are constitutional. The signatories argued that the provision violates Constitutional protections of human dignity (Article 30), the right to life (Article 39) or the prohibition against discrimination (Article 32).

On 22 October 2020, an 11–2 ruling[11] declared that abortion in Poland due to foetal abnormality was violating the Constitutional protection of human dignity. This effectively made abortions on that basis unobtainable for women in Poland. The provision had been used for 1074 of the 1110 legal abortions in 2019. The ruling triggered the October 2020 Polish protests, which forced the government to delay the ruling's publication in the Dziennik Ustaw until 27 January 2021.[12]

Case K 3/21 edit

In July 2021, Prime minister Mateusz Morawiecki asked the Tribunal for a constitutional review of three provisions of Treaty on European Union. Following a series of hearings of prominent officeholders, the Tribunal ruled on 7 October 2021[13] in a 12–2 decision that:

  1. Article 1 of the Treaty on European Union (establishing an "ever closer union"), insofar as it is interpreted by the European Court of Justice in a "new step" (nowy etap) which
    • enlarges the EU institutions' competence beyond the limits that Poland accepted via its treaties,
    • opposes the primacy of the Constitution of Poland in both validity and application,
    • opposes the sovereignty of the Polish state,
    is unconstitutional;
  2. Article 19 of the Treaty on European Union (that establishes the ECJ), insofar as it gives ordinary courts the right to disregard the Constitution, and to adjudicate on the basis of provisions repealed by the Sejm or deemed unconstitutional by the TK, is unconstitutional;
  3. Article 19 and Article 2 of the Treaty on European Union (values) are unconstitutional insofar as they empower ordinary courts to question the constitutionality of judicial appointments by the President.

Consequently, all branches of power in Poland argue that Poland's membership in the European Union does not entail that institutions external to the state have the supreme legal authority.

This was widely interpreted as a challenge of the primacy of European Union law, which emerged in Costa v. ENEL (1964), with some talking of a judicial "Polexit".[14] European primacy, however, had never been fully enshrined by previous Polish rulings, only insofar as it doesn't infringe on Poland's sovereignty (see K 18/04).

This landmark decision marks the culmination of the escalade over judicial nominations and reforms between Brussels and Warsaw that began in late 2015, when Law and Justice came to power, starting with the 2015 Polish Constitutional Court crisis.[14] Many politicians in Brussels called upon the European Commission to freeze payments to Poland. The Commission President said she was deeply concerned, and ordered to act swiftly.[14] The recently-implemented Rule of Law Conditionality Regulation could be used.

Presidents and vice presidents edit

Presidents edit

No. Start and end date Full name [b] Sejm Term as a Justice Term length
Presidents
1. 1 December 1985 – 1 December 1989 prof. Alfons Klafkowski   IX (PRL) 1 December 1985 – 1 December 1989 4 years, 0 days
2. 1 December 1989 – 19 November 1993[16] prof. Mieczysław Tyczka   X (PRL) 1 December 1989 – 17 June 1994 4 years, 198 days (resigned)
3. 19 November 1993[17] – 1 December 1997 prof. Andrzej Zoll   X (PRL) 1 December 1989 – 1 December 1997 8 years, 0 days
1 December 1997 – 6 January 1998 vacant
4. 6 January 1998[18] – 5 November 2006 prof. Marek Safjan   III 5 November 1997 – 5 November 2006 9 years, 0 days
5. 6 November 2006[19] – 25 June 2008 Jerzy Stępień   III 25 June 1999 – 25 June 2008 9 years, 0 days
6. 26 June 2008[20] – 2 December 2010 dr Bohdan Zdziennicki   IV 2 December 2001 – 2 December 2010 9 years, 0 days
7. 3 December 2010 – 19 December 2016 prof. Andrzej Rzepliński   VI 19 December 2007 – 19 December 2016 9 years, 0 days
20 December 2016 Julia Przyłębska[c]   VIII 9 December 2015 8 years, 140 days 205 days over term
8. 21 December 2016 - [a]

Vice Presidents edit

No. Start and end date Full name [b] Sejm Term as a Justice Term length
Vice Presidents
1. 1 December 1985 – 1 December 1993 prof. Leonard Łukaszuk   IX (PRL) 1 December 1985 – 1 December 1993 8 years, 0 days
2. 1 December 1993 – 1 December 2001 prof. Janusz Trzciński   II 1 December 1993 – 1 December 2001 8 years, 0 days
3. 2 December 2001 – 1 December 2006 prof. Andrzej Mączyński   III 1 December 1997 – 1 December 2006 9 years, 0 days
4. 2 December 2006 – 2 March 2010 Janusz Niemcewicz[21]   III 2 March 2001 – 2 March 2010 9 years, 0 days
5. 3 March 2010 – 2 December 2010 dr hab. Marek Mazurkiewicz   IV 2 December 2001 – 2 December 2010 9 years, 0 days
6. 3 December 2010 – 26 June 2017 prof. Stanisław Biernat   VI 26 June 2008 – 26 June 2017 9 years, 0 days
27 June – 4 July 2017 vacated
7. 5 July 2017 – 5 July 2023 dr hab. Mariusz Muszyński[c]   VIII 2 December 2015 8 years, 147 days
6 July 2023 vacated
  Nominated by PiS or its coalition partners
  Nominated by PO or its coalition partners
  Nominated by Democratic Left Alliance, Solidarity, or its coalition partners

Justices edit

Current edit

No. Full name [b] Sejm Votes Start date Term length Comment
62. dr hab. Andrzej Jakubecki   VIII 272 - - Position usurped by PiS nominee[c]
63. Piotr Pszczółkowski[22]   233 3 December 2015 8 years, 146 days
64. Julia Przyłębska[23]   234 9 December 2015 8 years, 140 days
65. dr hab. Zbigniew Jędrzejewski   227 28 April 2016[24] 7 years, 365 days
66. dr hab. Michał Warciński[25]   231 20 December 2016 7 years, 129 days
68. dr Andrzej Zielonacki[26]   227 28 June 2017[27] 6 years, 304 days
69. dr hab. Krzysztof Ślebzak   268 - - Position usurped by PiS nominee[c]
70. dr hab. Roman Hauser   274 - - Position usurped by PiS nominee[c]
71. dr Wojciech Sych[28]   228 8 April 2019[29] 5 years, 19 days
72. dr hab. Krystyna Pawłowicz[30]   IX 230 5 December 2019[31] 4 years, 144 days
73. Stanisław Piotrowicz[32]   230 5 December 2019[31] 4 years, 144 days
74. prof. Jakub Stelina[33]   233 5 December 2019[31] 4 years, 144 days
75. dr hab. Rafał Wojciechowski[34]   239 7 January 2020[35] 4 years, 111 days
76. Bartłomiej Sochański[36]   234 9 April 2020[37] 4 years, 18 days
77. Bogdan Święczkowski[38]   233 16 February 2022[39] 2 years, 71 days
  Nominated by PiS or its coalition partners
  Nominated by PO or its coalition partners

2015 Polish Constitutional Court crisis edit

In the summer and autumn 2015, a change of power occurred with Civic Platform (PO) losing both the Sejm and the Presidency to Law and Justice (PiS). These two branches appoint and swear new judges, respectively.

In 2015, the term of five judges was set to expire, three of which between Sejm election day and the new legislature's session, and two the month after. PO tried to appoint them in advance (they were: Roman Hauser, Krzysztof Ślebzak, Andrzej Jakubecki, Bronisław Sitek and Andrzej Sokala) but their oath was denied by the new PiS President, Andrzej Duda. As a result, they never sat. The new PiS majority nominated three other judges on 2 December 2015 (Henryk Cioch, Lech Morawski, Mariusz Muszyński) and two others the next week (Piotr Pszczółkowski, Julia Przyłębska), who were immediately sworn in. Cioch and Morawski later died while in office, and were replaced by Justyn Piskorski and Jarosław Wyrembak.

Of the appointments made before the election, the Constitutional Tribunal itself invalidated the last two and accepted the first three. As a consequence, of the appointments made after the election, the Tribunal accepted the last two (Piotr Pszczółkowski and Julia Przyłębska) and invalidated the first three (Henryk Cioch, Lech Morawski and Mariusz Muszyński). However, the ruling was disputed by the new government, who then went on to change the statutes regulating the Court, in order to have its nominees sit. See 2015 Polish Constitutional Court crisis.

Multiple cases were sent to the European Court of Human Rights and the European Court of Justice, challenging the Tribunal's legal status. In Xero Flor v Poland, the ECHR ruled on 7 May 2021 that a Polish company did not have the right to a fair trial because Muszyński's election was unlawful.[40] The Constitutional Tribunal is expected to judge on 3 August 2021 whether it will comply to the ruling or not; this is interpreted as a decision on whether the European or Polish courts are sovereign.[41] In a 14 July 2021 ruling, the Tribunal rejected the constitutionality of any attempt by the ECHR to suspend the Polish tribunals, as such competence has never been transferred by any treaty.[42]

Length of tenure edit

This graphical timeline depicts the length of each current justice's tenure on the Court:

Former edit

 
Marek Safjan, first President elected after the fall of communism in Poland
No. Full name [b] Sejm Term as a Justice Term length
1. prof. Henryk de Fiumel   IX (PRL) 1 December 1985 – 17 June 1986 198 days (died in office)
2. prof. Kazimierz Buchała   1 December 1985 – 1 December 1989 4 years, 0 days
3. prof. Natalia Gajl   1 December 1985 – 1 December 1989 4 years, 0 days
4. dr Adam Józefowicz   1 December 1985 – 1 December 1989 4 years, 0 days
5. dr Andrzej Kabat   1 December 1985 – 1 December 1989 4 years, 0 days
6. prof. Alfons Klafkowski   1 December 1985 – 1 December 1989 4 years, 0 days
7. prof. Stanisław Pawela   1 December 1985 – 1 December 1989 4 years, 0 days
8. dr Czesław Bakalarski   1 December 1985 – 1 December 1993 8 years, 0 days
9. prof. Kazimierz Działocha   1 December 1985 – 1 December 1993 8 years, 0 days
10. prof. Henryk Groszyk   1 December 1985 – 1 December 1993 8 years, 0 days
11. prof. Leonard Łukaszuk   1 December 1985 – 1 December 1993 8 years, 0 days
12. Remigiusz Orzechowski   1 December 1985 – 13 August 1993 7 years, 255 days (died in office)
13. Maria Łabor-Soroka[43] - 25 November 1986 – 30 November 1993 7 years, 5 days
14. Antoni Filcek   X (PRL) 1 December 1989 – 31 October 1992 2 years, 335 days (resigned)
15. prof. Mieczysław Tyczka   1 December 1989 – 17 June 1994 4 years, 198 days (resigned)
16. prof. Janina Zakrzewska   1 December 1989 – 27 May 1995 5 years, 177 days (died in office)
17. prof. Tomasz Dybowski   1 December 1989 – 1 December 1997 8 years, 0 days
18. prof. Wojciech Łączkowski   1 December 1989 – 1 December 1997 8 years, 0 days
19. prof. Andrzej Zoll   1 December 1989 – 1 December 1997 8 years, 0 days
20. Ferdynand Rymarz - I 19 February 1993 – 19 February 2001[44] 8 years, 0 days
21. dr hab. Błażej Wierzbowski   II 1 December 1993 – 30 November 1998[45] 4 years, 364 days (resigned)
22. prof. Wojciech Sokolewicz   1 December 1993 – 31 May 1999[45] 5 years, 181 days (resigned)
23. prof. Zdzisław Czeszejko-Sochacki 1 December 1993 – 1 December 2001[45] 8 years, 0 days
24. prof. Lech Garlicki 1 December 1993 – 1 December 2001[45] 8 years, 0 days
25. Stefan Jan Jaworski   1 December 1993 – 1 December 2001[45] 8 years, 0 days
26. prof. Janusz Trzciński   1 December 1993 – 1 December 2001[45] 8 years, 0 days
27. prof. Krzysztof Kolasiński - 27 May 1994 – 27 May 2002[46] 8 years, 0 days
28. Jadwiga Skórzewska-Łosiak   21 July 1995 – 21 July 2003[47] 8 years, 0 days
29. prof. Teresa Dębowska-Romanowska   III 5 November 1997 – 5 November 2006[48] 9 years, 0 days
30. prof. Marek Safjan   5 November 1997 – 5 November 2006[48] 9 years, 0 days
31. prof. Marian Zdyb   5 November 1997 – 5 November 2006[48] 9 years, 0 days
32. Wiesław Johann   1 December 1997 – 1 December 2006[49] 9 years, 0 days
33. prof. Biruta Lewaszkiewicz-Petrykowska   1 December 1997 – 1 December 2006[49] 9 years, 0 days
34. prof. Andrzej Mączyński   1 December 1997 – 1 December 2006[49] 9 years, 0 days
35. dr hab. Jerzy Ciemniewski   18 December 1998 – 18 December 2007[50] 9 years, 0 days
36. Jerzy Stępień   25 June 1999 – 25 June 2008[51] 9 years, 0 days
37. Janusz Niemcewicz   2 March 2001 – 2 March 2010[52] 9 years, 0 days
38. prof. Marian Grzybowski   IV 2 December 2001 – 2 December 2010[53] 9 years, 0 days
39. dr hab. Marek Mazurkiewicz   2 December 2001 – 2 December 2010[53] 9 years, 0 days
40. dr hab. Mirosław Wyrzykowski   2 December 2001 – 2 December 2010[53] 9 years, 0 days
41. dr Bohdan Zdziennicki   2 December 2001 – 2 December 2010[53] 9 years, 0 days
42. prof. Ewa Łętowska   28 May 2002 – 28 May 2011[54] 9 years, 0 days
43. prof. Adam Jamróz   22 July 2003 – 22 July 2012[55] 9 years, 0 days
44. dr hab. Maria Gintowt-Jankowicz   V 6 November 2006 – 6 November 2015[56] 9 years, 0 days
45. Wojciech Hermeliński   6 November 2006 – 6 November 2015[56] 9 years, 0 days
46. Marek Kotlinowski   6 November 2006 – 6 November 2015[56] 9 years, 0 days
47. dr hab. Zbigniew Cieślak   2 December 2006 – 2 December 2015[57] 9 years, 0 days
48. dr hab. Teresa Liszcz[58]   8 December 2006 – 8 December 2015[59] 9 years, 0 days
49. Lidia Bagińska[60]   8 December 2006 – 12 March 2007[61] 94 days (resigned)
50. prof. Mirosław Granat[62]   27 April 2007 – 27 April 2016[63] 9 years, 0 days
51. prof. Andrzej Rzepliński[64]   VI 19 December 2007 – 19 December 2016[65] 9 years, 0 days
52. prof. Stanisław Biernat   26 June 2008 – 26 June 2017[66] 9 years, 0 days
53. prof. Sławomira Wronkowska-Jaśkiewicz[67]   6 May 2010 – 6 May 2019[68] 9 years, 0 days
54. Stanisław Rymar[69]   3 December 2010 – 3 December 2019[70] 9 years, 0 days
55. prof. Piotr Tuleja[69]   3 December 2010 – 3 December 2019[70] 9 years, 0 days
56. prof. Marek Zubik[69]   3 December 2010 – 3 December 2019[70] 9 years, 0 days
57. prof. Małgorzata Pyziak-Szafnicka[71]   5 January 2011 – 5 January 2020[72] 9 years, 0 days
58. prof. Andrzej Wróbel   29 May 2011 – 24 January 2017[73] 5 years, 240 days (resigned)
59. prof. Leon Kieres   23 July 2012 – 23 July 2021[74] 9 years, 0 days
prof. Roman Hauser   VII 7 November 2015[75]
(never seated)
8 years, 172 days
(election overruled)
prof. Krzysztof Ślebzak   7 November 2015[76]
(never seated)
8 years, 172 days
(election overruled)
prof. Andrzej Jakubecki   7 November 2015[77]
(never seated)
8 years, 172 days
(election overruled)
prof. Bronisław Sitek   (3 December 2015)[78]
(never seated)
0 days
(election ruled unconstitutional)
prof. Andrzej Sokala   (9 December 2015)[79]
(never seated)
0 days
(election ruled unconstitutional)
60. prof. Henryk Cioch[80]   VIII 2 December 2015[81] – 20 December 2017 2 years, 18 days (died in office)
61. prof. Lech Morawski[80]   2 December 2015[81] – 12 July 2017 1 year, 222 days (died in office)
67. dr hab. Grzegorz Jędrejek[82]   27 February 2017 – 19 January 2020[83] 2 years, 326 days (died in office)
No. Full name [d] Sejm Term as a Justice Term length

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c According to the effective law (the Article 10 §2 of the Act of 30 November 2016 on organisation and mode of proceedings before the Constitutional Tribunal which came in force on 3 January 2017[84] after Przyłębska's appointment as the President) the term of the President of the Constitutional Tribunal lasts 6 years. Therefore Przyłębska's term should have ended on 21 December 2022. Przyłębska and her PiS backers, however, believed her term as President was not actually due to expire until December 2024, since this is when her term as a judge in general expires; as of 6 March 2024, she continued to sit as President of the Tribunal.[85][86][87]
  2. ^ a b c d 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).[15]
  3. ^ a b c d e The 8th Sejm elected prof. Henryk Cioch, Lech Morawski and dr. hab. Mariusz Muszyński, even though prof. Roman Hauser, Krzysztof Ślebzak and Andrzej Jakubecki had been elected by the 7th Sejm in advance. The 3 seats' terms were to end after the 2015 election, but during the recess, leaving room for conflicting interpretation of the constitution. Since the Henryk Cioch and Lech Morawski died during their terms, dr hab. Jarosław Wyrembak and Justyn Piskorski who were elected on their place are also considered disputed.
  4. ^ 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).[15]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Dz.U. z 1982 r. nr 11, poz. 83[permanent dead link].
  2. ^ a b c d e Skrzydło, Wiesław; Grabowska, Sabina; Grabowski (red.), Radosław (2009). Konstytucja Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej. Komentarz encyklopedyczny. Warsaw: Wolters Kluwer Polska. ISBN 978-83-7601-686-3.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Alberski, Robert (2010). Trybunał Konstytucyjny w polskich systemach politycznych. Wrocław: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego. ISBN 978-83-229-3146-2.
  4. ^ a b c Kryszkiewicz, Małgorzata; Osiecki, Grzegorz (2016). "Twarda linia Prawa i Sprawiedliwości". Dziennik Gazeta Prawna.
  5. ^ "Prezes polskiego TK o słowach prezesa niemieckiego TK: jestem zażenowana". Onet.pl. 13 May 2020. Archived from the original on 13 May 2020. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  6. ^ prof. Marcin Matczak. "Poland's Constitutional Crisis: Facts and interpretations" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 13 May 2020. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  7. ^ Dominika Sitnicka (22 April 2020). "Captured Constitutional Tribunal rules on the Supreme Court: Implementation of CJEU judgment inconsistent with EU law". Rule of Law. Archived from the original on 13 May 2020. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  8. ^ Tomasz Tadeusz Koncewicz (13 March 2020). "From Constitutional to Political Justice: The Tragic Trajectories of the Polish Constitutional Court". Reconnect EU. Archived from the original on 13 May 2020. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  9. ^ Biernat, Stanisław; Dębowska–Romanowska, Teresa; et al. (10 February 2020). "'Constitutional Tribunal has virtually been abolished,' announce retired judges". Ruleoflaw.pl. Archived from the original on 29 October 2020. Retrieved 28 October 2020.
  10. ^ Tilles, Daniel (4 March 2024). "Polish government unveils planned overhaul of "defective" constitutional court". Notes from Poland. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  11. ^ "Planowanie rodziny, ochrona płodu ludzkiego i warunki dopuszczalności przerywania ciąży". Trybunał Konstytucyjny. 22 October 2020. from the original on 10 February 2021. Retrieved 27 October 2020.
  12. ^ "Poland: The Constitutional Court Repeals Eugenic Abortion". ECLJ. 23 October 2020.
  13. ^ "Ocena zgodności z Konstytucją RP wybranych przepisów Traktatu o Unii Europejskiej". Trybunał Konstytucyjny. 7 October 2021. Retrieved 12 October 2021.
  14. ^ a b c "Polexit? Fury in Brussels after Warsaw court rules Polish Constitution overrides EU law". Euronews. 8 October 2021. Retrieved 12 October 2021.
  15. ^ a b "The Constitution of the Republic of Poland". Sejm.
  16. ^ W związku ze złożoną rezygnacją, Uchwałą Sejmu Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej z dnia 26 maja 1993 r. w sprawie odwołania Prezesa Trybunału Konstytucyjnego (M.P. Nr 28, poz. 290) odwołany ze stanowiska z chwilą wyboru nowego Prezesa TK.
  17. ^ W związku z rezygnacją poprzednika w trakcje kadencji, Uchwałą Sejmu Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej z dnia 19 listopada 1993 r. w sprawie wyboru Prezesa Trybunału Konstytucyjnego (M.P. Nr 62, poz. 558) powołany na stanowisko Prezesa TK.
  18. ^ M.P. z 1998 r. Nr 1, poz. 2
  19. ^ M.P. z 2006 r. Nr 80, poz. 804
  20. ^ M.P. z 2008 r. Nr 53, poz. 470
  21. ^ Nominated by Freedom Union
  22. ^ M.P. z 2015 r. poz. 1186; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 56
  23. ^ M.P. z 2015 r. poz. 1185; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 56
  24. ^ M.P. z 2016 r. poz. 393; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 369
  25. ^ M.P. z 2016 r. poz. 1206; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 1046
  26. ^ M.P. z 2017 r. Nr , poz. 610
  27. ^ prezydent.pl. . www.prezydent.pl. Archived from the original on 1 July 2017. Retrieved 28 June 2017.
  28. ^ M.P. z 2019 r. Nr , poz. 414
  29. ^ . www.prezydent.pl. Archived from the original on 9 May 2019. Retrieved 9 May 2019.
  30. ^ M.P. z 2019 r. Nr 0, poz. 1132
  31. ^ a b c . prezydent.pl. 5 December 2019. Archived from the original on 6 December 2019. Retrieved 6 December 2019.
  32. ^ M.P. z 2019 r. Nr 0, poz. 1133
  33. ^ M.P. z 2019 r. Nr 0, poz. 1134
  34. ^ M.P. z 2019 r. Nr 0, poz. 1197
  35. ^ . www.prezydent.pl. Archived from the original on 18 October 2021. Retrieved 7 January 2020.
  36. ^ M.P. z 2020 r. Nr 0, poz. 340
  37. ^ . www.prezydent.pl. Archived from the original on 29 September 2020. Retrieved 9 April 2020.
  38. ^ M.P. z 2022 r. Nr , poz. 203
  39. ^ (in Polish). Oficjalna strona Prezydenta Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej. 16 February 2022. Archived from the original on 16 February 2022. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  40. ^ "Trybunał w Strasburgu: TK z dublerem nie jest sądem zgodnym z prawem". wyborcza.pl. 7 May 2021.
  41. ^ Judy Dempsey (4 May 2021). "Poland's Constitution Under Siege". Carnegie Europe. Retrieved 29 May 2021.
  42. ^ "Obowiązek państwa członkowskiego UE polegający na wykonywaniu środków tymczasowych odnoszących się do kształtu ustroju i funkcjonowania konstytucyjnych organów władzy sądowniczej tego państwa". tribunal.gov.pl (in Polish). 14 July 2021. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  43. ^ Wybrana w miejsce Henryka de Fiumel.
  44. ^ M.P. z 1993 r. Nr 10, poz. 67; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 755
  45. ^ a b c d e f M.P. z 1993 r. Nr 62, poz. 557; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 89-A
  46. ^ M.P. z 1994 r. Nr 33, poz. 263; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 393
  47. ^ M.P. z 1995 r. Nr 37, poz. 440; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 1143
  48. ^ a b c M.P. z 1997 r. Nr 82, poz. 789; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 11; posiedzenie 1, głosowanie nr 1
  49. ^ a b c M.P. z 1997 r. Nr 83, poz. 810; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 12; posiedzenie 3, głosowanie nr 2
  50. ^ M.P. z 1998 r. Nr 46, poz. 646; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 765; posiedzenie 39, głosowanie nr 8
  51. ^ M.P. z 1999 r. Nr 23, poz. 332; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 1159; posiedzenie 52, głosowanie nr 10
  52. ^ M.P. z 2001 r. Nr 9, poz. 149; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 2565; posiedzenie nr 102, głosowanie nr 230
  53. ^ a b c d M.P. z 2001 r. Nr 42, poz. 672; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 31; posiedzenie 4, głosowanie nr 3
  54. ^ M.P. z 2002 r. Nr 21, poz. 371; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 435; posiedzenie 22, głosowanie nr 196
  55. ^ M.P. z 2003 r. Nr 37, poz. 514; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 1709; posiedzenie 52, głosowanie nr 70
  56. ^ a b c M.P. z 2006 r. Nr 80, poz. 792; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 1025
  57. ^ M.P. z 2006 r. Nr 84, poz. 842; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 1083
  58. ^ Złożyła ślubowanie i podjęła obowiązki sędziego 29 grudnia 2006.
  59. ^ M.P. z 2006 r. Nr 89, poz. 919; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 1157
  60. ^ Złożyła ślubowanie i podjęła obowiązki sędziego 6 marca 2007.
  61. ^ M.P. z 2006 r. Nr 89, poz. 918; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 1157
  62. ^ Złożył ślubowanie i podjął obowiązki sędziego 8 maja 2007.
  63. ^ M.P. z 2007 r. Nr 29, poz. 320; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 1637
  64. ^ Złożył ślubowanie i podjął obowiązki sędziego 14 stycznia 2008.
  65. ^ M.P. z 2008 r. Nr 100, poz. 1079; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 26
  66. ^ M.P. z 2008 r. Nr 47, poz. 420; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 554
  67. ^ Złożyła ślubowanie i podjęła obowiązki sędziego 17 maja 2010.
  68. ^ M.P. z 2010 r. Nr 38, poz. 525; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 2918
  69. ^ a b c Gazeta Wyborcza, ost. spr.: 27.11.2010.
  70. ^ a b c M.P. z 2010 r. Nr 93, poz. 1067; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 3573
  71. ^ Złożyła ślubowanie i podjęła obowiązki sędziego 11 stycznia 2011.
  72. ^ M.P. z 2011 r. Nr 4, poz. 39; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 3676
  73. ^ M.P. z 2011 r. Nr 45, poz. 492; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 4144
  74. ^ M.P. z 2012 r. poz. 506; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 507
  75. ^ M.P. z 2015 r. poz. 1038; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 3954
  76. ^ M.P. z 2015 r. poz. 1040; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 3955
  77. ^ M.P. z 2015 r. poz. 1039; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 3956
  78. ^ M.P. z 2015 r. poz. 1041; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 3957
  79. ^ M.P. z 2015 r. poz. 1042; Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego – druk nr 3958
  80. ^ a b Złożył ślubowanie 3 grudnia 2015, dopuszczony – orzekania 20 grudnia 2016.
  81. ^ a b Kadencje sędziów – zestawienie
  82. ^ M.P. z 2017 r. Nr 0, poz. 224
  83. ^ "Prof. Jędrejek nowym sędzią TK. Prezydent przyjął ślubowanie". 27 February 2017. Retrieved 27 February 2017.
  84. ^ Ustawa z dnia 30 listopada 2016 r. o organizacji i trybie postępowania przed Trybunałem Konstytucyjnym [Act of 30 November 2016 on organisation and mode of proceedings before the Constitutional Tribunal], Dz. U. z 2016 r. poz. 2072
  85. ^ "Trybunał Konstytucyjny. Julia Przyłębska odwołała rozprawę. Było za mało sędziów - TVN24". tvn24.pl (in Polish). TVN 24. 9 May 2023. Retrieved 10 May 2023.
  86. ^ "Ast: Julia Przyłębska jest prezesem Trybunału Konstytucyjnego - RMF 24". rmf24.pl (in Polish). RMF FM. Retrieved 10 May 2023.
  87. ^ Tilles, Daniel (5 January 2023). "Polish constitutional court judges rebel against chief justice, demanding she step down". Notes from Poland. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  • Shotter, James; Huber, Evon (13 July 2017). "Poland's ruling party drafts bill to force judges to step down". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 11 December 2022. Retrieved 14 July 2017.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Constitutional Tribunal of Poland at Wikimedia Commons
  • Official website  

constitutional, tribunal, poland, constitutional, tribunal, polish, trybunał, konstytucyjny, constitutional, court, republic, poland, judicial, body, established, resolve, disputes, constitutionality, activities, state, institutions, main, task, supervise, com. The Constitutional Tribunal Polish Trybunal Konstytucyjny is the constitutional court of the Republic of Poland a judicial body established to resolve disputes on the constitutionality of the activities of state institutions its main task is to supervise the compliance of statutory law with the Constitution of the Republic of Poland Constitutional TribunalTrybunal KonstytucyjnyEstablished26 March 1982 42 years ago 1982 03 26 constitutional amendment establishing the Tribunal 1986 beginning of the activityLocationWarsaw PolandComposition methodPrime minister s nomination with Sejm confirmation President and Vice President appointed by the President of Poland Authorized byConstitution of the Republic of PolandJudge term length9 years one term onlyNumber of positions15LanguagePolishWebsitewww wbr trybunal wbr gov wbr plPresidentCurrentlyJulia Przylebska Over TermSince21 December 2016 a Vice PresidentCurrentlydr hab Mariusz MuszynskiSince5 July 2017 The seat of the Tribunal Warsaw The seat of the Tribunal Warsaw 2006 Its creation was a request of the Solidarity movement following its 1981 National Congress that took place a few weeks before the introduction of martial law 1 The Tribunal was established on 26 March 1982 and judges took office on 1 January 1986 The tribunal s powers increased in 1989 with the transition to the capitalist Third Polish Republic and in 1997 with the establishment of a new Constitution 2 The Constitution mandates that its 15 members are elected by the Sejm the lower house for 9 years It is the subject of an appointment crisis since 2015 It should not be confused with the Supreme Court of Poland Contents 1 Powers 2 Composition 3 History 3 1 1982 1989 People s Republic of Poland 3 2 1989 2014 Third Polish Republic 3 3 2015 2016 Polish Constitutional Court crisis 4 Landmark decisions 4 1 Case K 1 20 4 2 Case K 3 21 5 Presidents and vice presidents 5 1 Presidents 5 2 Vice Presidents 6 Justices 6 1 Current 6 2 2015 Polish Constitutional Court crisis 6 3 Length of tenure 6 4 Former 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksPowers editThe Constitutional Tribunal adjudicates on the compliance with the Constitution of legislation and international agreements also their ratification on disputes over the powers of central constitutional bodies and on compliance with the Constitution of the aims and activities of political parties It also rules on constitutional complaints citation needed Composition editThe Constitutional Tribunal is made up of 15 judges chosen by the Sejm RP the lower house of parliament for single nine year terms The Constitutional Tribunal constitutes one of the formal guarantees of a state grounded on the rule of law citation needed History edit1982 1989 People s Republic of Poland edit The Constitutional Tribunal was established by the amendment of the Constitution of the People s Republic of Poland on 26 March 1982 1 Due to the brevity of the introduced article 33a it was decided that a law must be brought forth that would outline the proceedings of the Constitutional Tribunal 3 This became an intricate process with 15 drafts developed and the final act was ratified by the Sejm on 29 April 1985 which allowed for the formal commencement of the Tribunal s judicial proceedings on 1 January 1986 3 But the courts competence and judicial capacity were limited at this time as all rulings on the constitutionality of bills could be dismissed by a 2 3 majority vote in the Sejm 2 This in effect would place the rulings in an indefinite moratorium as these votes rarely occurred 2 On 24 January 1986 the first motion reference U 1 86 was brought before the Constitutional Tribunal on behalf of the Presidium of the Provincial National Council in Wroclaw 3 The claimants sought to contend two paragraphs of the Ordinance of the Council of Ministers in regard to the sale of state property and the procedures and costs related to it as unconstitutional 3 In opposition to the government s stance the court ruled in a 3 member panel on 28 May 1986 that the introduced paragraphs were unconstitutional 3 The Council of Ministers called for a reevaluation of the case but on 5 November 1986 the Constitutional Tribunal upheld its ruling 3 1989 2014 Third Polish Republic edit In 1989 the Constitutional Tribunal s powers expanded as it secured the right to universally decide on the binding interpretation of laws 2 Many changes came with the enactment of the 1997 Constitution the number of judges increased from 12 to 15 terms of office were elongated by 1 year for a total of 9 years and the Tribunal lost its competence to decide the interpretation of legal statutes in the form of abstract provisions 2 2015 2016 Polish Constitutional Court crisis edit Main article 2015 Polish Constitutional Court crisis nbsp Demonstration organized by the KOD 18 December 2016 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 Before the new president of Poland Andrzej Duda assumed office on 6 August 2015 and the new eighth Sejm was seated on 12 November 2015 the PO majority attempted to nominate enough judges so that the judicial branch would not quickly fall under the control of PiS In 2015 5 of the 15 seats were due to be replaced Three terms were due to end during the Sejm s recess after the 25 October election but before the eighth Sejm was seated on 12 November Two others were due for early December PO attempted to nominate all five seats due to be vacant in the year 2015 in advance In June 2015 they enacted a provision in which it sought to transfer such power to the Sejm 4 Then on 8 October 2015 two weeks before the election the Sejm elected these 5 judges The new President Duda refused to let any of them take their oaths of office After PiS won the elections and a majority of seats they nominated a different set of five judges who were immediately sworn in This ignited a fierce partisan struggle as the remaining judges in the Tribunal most of which had been nominated by PO majorities ruled out 3 of the 5 PiS nominees validating instead 3 PO nominees 4 with the 3 PiS judges sworn in not allowed to hear cases As a result a law was immediately passed by the PiS majority to force the inclusion of its nominees sparking protests and foreign statements of either hostility or support As this was not enough a total of 6 remedial bills devised by PiS were enacted in the 2015 2016 period 4 A two thirds majority was instated diluting partisan influence Finally the term of resisting President Rzeplinski ended and on 21 December 2016 President Andrzej Duda appointed junior member Julia Przylebska as President of the Constitutional Tribunal nbsp The Grand Courtroom in which the Court adjudicates in its full composition nbsp Presidents and Vice Presidents of the Constitutional Tribunal from 2006 to 2016 Marek Mazurkiewicz Andrzej Maczynski Janusz Niemcewicz Jerzy Stepien Bohdan Zdziennicki i Andrzej Rzeplinski 2010 Since the reform and takeover of the Constitutional Tribunal by the Law and Justice the independence and sovereignty of the institution has been questioned It was called a puppet court by Polish opposition judges associations some foreign judicial organisations and constitutionalist counterparts 5 6 7 8 In February 2020 former Constitutional Tribunal judges including former presidents of the tribunal Andrzej Rzeplinski Marek Safjan pl Jerzy Stepien pl Bohdan Zdziennicki pl and Andrzej Zoll stated We the undersigned retired judges of the Constitutional Tribunal regret to state that the actions of the legislature and the executive since 2015 and the Constitutional Tribunal leadership since 2017 have led to a dramatic decline in the significance and the prestige of this constitutional body as well as to the inability to perform its constitutional tasks and duties Unfortunately the widespread belief that the Constitutional Tribunal has virtually been abolished is correct former Constitutional Tribunal judges Ruleoflaw pl 9 PiS having been reelected to the Sejm in 2019 and the PiS affiliated Andrzej Duda being reelected as preisdent in 2020 they were able to fill the Court s 15 seats completely by 2021 On 4 March 2024 following a non PiS government being elected in October 2023 and formally sworn in on 13 December 2023 a package of measures was announced with the aim of reforming the Tribunal The measures included a prospective Sejm resolution calling on illegitimately appointed judges to resign voluntarily and branding Julia Przylebska as not being authorised to be the Tribunal s chief justice Przylebska having been sworn in by Duda in December 2016 without the required resolution being issued by the general assembly of Tribunal judges and being believed by a number of legal experts to have sat completely illegitimately since December 2022 a prospective legislation to alter selection procedures requiring candidates to take part in an open public hearing and to receive the approval of three fifths of MPs and eligibility anyone who has been an active politician within the last four years including even being a member of a political party would not be eligible to sit on the Tribunal any politician who did get selected would not be able to rule on cases relating to legislation that they had been involved with within the last ten years and prospective constitutional changes to allow for the implementation of the measures 10 Landmark decisions editCase K 1 20 edit See also 2020 2021 women s strike protests in Poland The Tribunal received a referral by 119 MPs on whether or not abortions of pregnancies unrelated to rape or not threatening the mother s life which they call eugenic are constitutional The signatories argued that the provision violates Constitutional protections of human dignity Article 30 the right to life Article 39 or the prohibition against discrimination Article 32 On 22 October 2020 an 11 2 ruling 11 declared that abortion in Poland due to foetal abnormality was violating the Constitutional protection of human dignity This effectively made abortions on that basis unobtainable for women in Poland The provision had been used for 1074 of the 1110 legal abortions in 2019 The ruling triggered the October 2020 Polish protests which forced the government to delay the ruling s publication in the Dziennik Ustaw until 27 January 2021 12 Case K 3 21 edit In July 2021 Prime minister Mateusz Morawiecki asked the Tribunal for a constitutional review of three provisions of Treaty on European Union Following a series of hearings of prominent officeholders the Tribunal ruled on 7 October 2021 13 in a 12 2 decision that Article 1 of the Treaty on European Union establishing an ever closer union insofar as it is interpreted by the European Court of Justice in a new step nowy etap which enlarges the EU institutions competence beyond the limits that Poland accepted via its treaties opposes the primacy of the Constitution of Poland in both validity and application opposes the sovereignty of the Polish state is unconstitutional Article 19 of the Treaty on European Union that establishes the ECJ insofar as it gives ordinary courts the right to disregard the Constitution and to adjudicate on the basis of provisions repealed by the Sejm or deemed unconstitutional by the TK is unconstitutional Article 19 and Article 2 of the Treaty on European Union values are unconstitutional insofar as they empower ordinary courts to question the constitutionality of judicial appointments by the President Consequently all branches of power in Poland argue that Poland s membership in the European Union does not entail that institutions external to the state have the supreme legal authority This was widely interpreted as a challenge of the primacy of European Union law which emerged in Costa v ENEL 1964 with some talking of a judicial Polexit 14 European primacy however had never been fully enshrined by previous Polish rulings only insofar as it doesn t infringe on Poland s sovereignty see K 18 04 This landmark decision marks the culmination of the escalade over judicial nominations and reforms between Brussels and Warsaw that began in late 2015 when Law and Justice came to power starting with the 2015 Polish Constitutional Court crisis 14 Many politicians in Brussels called upon the European Commission to freeze payments to Poland The Commission President said she was deeply concerned and ordered to act swiftly 14 The recently implemented Rule of Law Conditionality Regulation could be used Presidents and vice presidents editPresidents edit No Start and end date Full name b Sejm Term as a Justice Term length Presidents 1 1 December 1985 1 December 1989 prof Alfons Klafkowski IX PRL 1 December 1985 1 December 1989 4 years 0 days 2 1 December 1989 19 November 1993 16 prof Mieczyslaw Tyczka X PRL 1 December 1989 17 June 1994 4 years 198 days resigned 3 19 November 1993 17 1 December 1997 prof Andrzej Zoll X PRL 1 December 1989 1 December 1997 8 years 0 days 1 December 1997 6 January 1998 vacant 4 6 January 1998 18 5 November 2006 prof Marek Safjan III 5 November 1997 5 November 2006 9 years 0 days 5 6 November 2006 19 25 June 2008 Jerzy Stepien III 25 June 1999 25 June 2008 9 years 0 days 6 26 June 2008 20 2 December 2010 dr Bohdan Zdziennicki IV 2 December 2001 2 December 2010 9 years 0 days 7 3 December 2010 19 December 2016 prof Andrzej Rzeplinski VI 19 December 2007 19 December 2016 9 years 0 days 20 December 2016 Julia Przylebska c VIII 9 December 2015 8 years 140 days 205 days over term 8 21 December 2016 a Vice Presidents edit No Start and end date Full name b Sejm Term as a Justice Term length Vice Presidents 1 1 December 1985 1 December 1993 prof Leonard Lukaszuk IX PRL 1 December 1985 1 December 1993 8 years 0 days 2 1 December 1993 1 December 2001 prof Janusz Trzcinski II 1 December 1993 1 December 2001 8 years 0 days 3 2 December 2001 1 December 2006 prof Andrzej Maczynski III 1 December 1997 1 December 2006 9 years 0 days 4 2 December 2006 2 March 2010 Janusz Niemcewicz 21 III 2 March 2001 2 March 2010 9 years 0 days 5 3 March 2010 2 December 2010 dr hab Marek Mazurkiewicz IV 2 December 2001 2 December 2010 9 years 0 days 6 3 December 2010 26 June 2017 prof Stanislaw Biernat VI 26 June 2008 26 June 2017 9 years 0 days 27 June 4 July 2017 vacated 7 5 July 2017 5 July 2023 dr hab Mariusz Muszynski c VIII 2 December 2015 8 years 147 days 6 July 2023 vacated Nominated by PiS or its coalition partners Nominated by PO or its coalition partners Nominated by Democratic Left Alliance Solidarity or its coalition partnersJustices editCurrent edit No Full name b Sejm Votes Start date Term length Comment 62 dr hab Andrzej Jakubecki VIII 272 Position usurped by PiS nominee c 63 Piotr Pszczolkowski 22 233 3 December 2015 8 years 146 days 64 Julia Przylebska 23 234 9 December 2015 8 years 140 days 65 dr hab Zbigniew Jedrzejewski 227 28 April 2016 24 7 years 365 days 66 dr hab Michal Warcinski 25 231 20 December 2016 7 years 129 days 68 dr Andrzej Zielonacki 26 227 28 June 2017 27 6 years 304 days 69 dr hab Krzysztof Slebzak 268 Position usurped by PiS nominee c 70 dr hab Roman Hauser 274 Position usurped by PiS nominee c 71 dr Wojciech Sych 28 228 8 April 2019 29 5 years 19 days 72 dr hab Krystyna Pawlowicz 30 IX 230 5 December 2019 31 4 years 144 days 73 Stanislaw Piotrowicz 32 230 5 December 2019 31 4 years 144 days 74 prof Jakub Stelina 33 233 5 December 2019 31 4 years 144 days 75 dr hab Rafal Wojciechowski 34 239 7 January 2020 35 4 years 111 days 76 Bartlomiej Sochanski 36 234 9 April 2020 37 4 years 18 days 77 Bogdan Swieczkowski 38 233 16 February 2022 39 2 years 71 days Nominated by PiS or its coalition partners Nominated by PO or its coalition partners 2015 Polish Constitutional Court crisis edit In the summer and autumn 2015 a change of power occurred with Civic Platform PO losing both the Sejm and the Presidency to Law and Justice PiS These two branches appoint and swear new judges respectively In 2015 the term of five judges was set to expire three of which between Sejm election day and the new legislature s session and two the month after PO tried to appoint them in advance they were Roman Hauser Krzysztof Slebzak Andrzej Jakubecki Bronislaw Sitek and Andrzej Sokala but their oath was denied by the new PiS President Andrzej Duda As a result they never sat The new PiS majority nominated three other judges on 2 December 2015 Henryk Cioch Lech Morawski Mariusz Muszynski and two others the next week Piotr Pszczolkowski Julia Przylebska who were immediately sworn in Cioch and Morawski later died while in office and were replaced by Justyn Piskorski and Jaroslaw Wyrembak Of the appointments made before the election the Constitutional Tribunal itself invalidated the last two and accepted the first three As a consequence of the appointments made after the election the Tribunal accepted the last two Piotr Pszczolkowski and Julia Przylebska and invalidated the first three Henryk Cioch Lech Morawski and Mariusz Muszynski However the ruling was disputed by the new government who then went on to change the statutes regulating the Court in order to have its nominees sit See 2015 Polish Constitutional Court crisis Multiple cases were sent to the European Court of Human Rights and the European Court of Justice challenging the Tribunal s legal status In Xero Flor v Poland the ECHR ruled on 7 May 2021 that a Polish company did not have the right to a fair trial because Muszynski s election was unlawful 40 The Constitutional Tribunal is expected to judge on 3 August 2021 whether it will comply to the ruling or not this is interpreted as a decision on whether the European or Polish courts are sovereign 41 In a 14 July 2021 ruling the Tribunal rejected the constitutionality of any attempt by the ECHR to suspend the Polish tribunals as such competence has never been transferred by any treaty 42 Length of tenure edit This graphical timeline depicts the length of each current justice s tenure on the Court Former edit nbsp Marek Safjan first President elected after the fall of communism in Poland No Full name b Sejm Term as a Justice Term length 1 prof Henryk de Fiumel IX PRL 1 December 1985 17 June 1986 198 days died in office 2 prof Kazimierz Buchala 1 December 1985 1 December 1989 4 years 0 days 3 prof Natalia Gajl 1 December 1985 1 December 1989 4 years 0 days 4 dr Adam Jozefowicz 1 December 1985 1 December 1989 4 years 0 days 5 dr Andrzej Kabat 1 December 1985 1 December 1989 4 years 0 days 6 prof Alfons Klafkowski 1 December 1985 1 December 1989 4 years 0 days 7 prof Stanislaw Pawela 1 December 1985 1 December 1989 4 years 0 days 8 dr Czeslaw Bakalarski 1 December 1985 1 December 1993 8 years 0 days 9 prof Kazimierz Dzialocha 1 December 1985 1 December 1993 8 years 0 days 10 prof Henryk Groszyk 1 December 1985 1 December 1993 8 years 0 days 11 prof Leonard Lukaszuk 1 December 1985 1 December 1993 8 years 0 days 12 Remigiusz Orzechowski 1 December 1985 13 August 1993 7 years 255 days died in office 13 Maria Labor Soroka 43 25 November 1986 30 November 1993 7 years 5 days 14 Antoni Filcek X PRL 1 December 1989 31 October 1992 2 years 335 days resigned 15 prof Mieczyslaw Tyczka 1 December 1989 17 June 1994 4 years 198 days resigned 16 prof Janina Zakrzewska 1 December 1989 27 May 1995 5 years 177 days died in office 17 prof Tomasz Dybowski 1 December 1989 1 December 1997 8 years 0 days 18 prof Wojciech Laczkowski 1 December 1989 1 December 1997 8 years 0 days 19 prof Andrzej Zoll 1 December 1989 1 December 1997 8 years 0 days 20 Ferdynand Rymarz I 19 February 1993 19 February 2001 44 8 years 0 days 21 dr hab Blazej Wierzbowski II 1 December 1993 30 November 1998 45 4 years 364 days resigned 22 prof Wojciech Sokolewicz 1 December 1993 31 May 1999 45 5 years 181 days resigned 23 prof Zdzislaw Czeszejko Sochacki 1 December 1993 1 December 2001 45 8 years 0 days 24 prof Lech Garlicki 1 December 1993 1 December 2001 45 8 years 0 days 25 Stefan Jan Jaworski 1 December 1993 1 December 2001 45 8 years 0 days 26 prof Janusz Trzcinski 1 December 1993 1 December 2001 45 8 years 0 days 27 prof Krzysztof Kolasinski 27 May 1994 27 May 2002 46 8 years 0 days 28 Jadwiga Skorzewska Losiak 21 July 1995 21 July 2003 47 8 years 0 days 29 prof Teresa Debowska Romanowska III 5 November 1997 5 November 2006 48 9 years 0 days 30 prof Marek Safjan 5 November 1997 5 November 2006 48 9 years 0 days 31 prof Marian Zdyb 5 November 1997 5 November 2006 48 9 years 0 days 32 Wieslaw Johann 1 December 1997 1 December 2006 49 9 years 0 days 33 prof Biruta Lewaszkiewicz Petrykowska 1 December 1997 1 December 2006 49 9 years 0 days 34 prof Andrzej Maczynski 1 December 1997 1 December 2006 49 9 years 0 days 35 dr hab Jerzy Ciemniewski 18 December 1998 18 December 2007 50 9 years 0 days 36 Jerzy Stepien 25 June 1999 25 June 2008 51 9 years 0 days 37 Janusz Niemcewicz 2 March 2001 2 March 2010 52 9 years 0 days 38 prof Marian Grzybowski IV 2 December 2001 2 December 2010 53 9 years 0 days 39 dr hab Marek Mazurkiewicz 2 December 2001 2 December 2010 53 9 years 0 days 40 dr hab Miroslaw Wyrzykowski 2 December 2001 2 December 2010 53 9 years 0 days 41 dr Bohdan Zdziennicki 2 December 2001 2 December 2010 53 9 years 0 days 42 prof Ewa Letowska 28 May 2002 28 May 2011 54 9 years 0 days 43 prof Adam Jamroz 22 July 2003 22 July 2012 55 9 years 0 days 44 dr hab Maria Gintowt Jankowicz V 6 November 2006 6 November 2015 56 9 years 0 days 45 Wojciech Hermelinski 6 November 2006 6 November 2015 56 9 years 0 days 46 Marek Kotlinowski 6 November 2006 6 November 2015 56 9 years 0 days 47 dr hab Zbigniew Cieslak 2 December 2006 2 December 2015 57 9 years 0 days 48 dr hab Teresa Liszcz 58 8 December 2006 8 December 2015 59 9 years 0 days 49 Lidia Baginska 60 8 December 2006 12 March 2007 61 94 days resigned 50 prof Miroslaw Granat 62 27 April 2007 27 April 2016 63 9 years 0 days 51 prof Andrzej Rzeplinski 64 VI 19 December 2007 19 December 2016 65 9 years 0 days 52 prof Stanislaw Biernat 26 June 2008 26 June 2017 66 9 years 0 days 53 prof Slawomira Wronkowska Jaskiewicz 67 6 May 2010 6 May 2019 68 9 years 0 days 54 Stanislaw Rymar 69 3 December 2010 3 December 2019 70 9 years 0 days 55 prof Piotr Tuleja 69 3 December 2010 3 December 2019 70 9 years 0 days 56 prof Marek Zubik 69 3 December 2010 3 December 2019 70 9 years 0 days 57 prof Malgorzata Pyziak Szafnicka 71 5 January 2011 5 January 2020 72 9 years 0 days 58 prof Andrzej Wrobel 29 May 2011 24 January 2017 73 5 years 240 days resigned 59 prof Leon Kieres 23 July 2012 23 July 2021 74 9 years 0 days prof Roman Hauser VII 7 November 2015 75 never seated 8 years 172 days election overruled prof Krzysztof Slebzak 7 November 2015 76 never seated 8 years 172 days election overruled prof Andrzej Jakubecki 7 November 2015 77 never seated 8 years 172 days election overruled prof Bronislaw Sitek 3 December 2015 78 never seated 0 days election ruled unconstitutional prof Andrzej Sokala 9 December 2015 79 never seated 0 days election ruled unconstitutional 60 prof Henryk Cioch 80 VIII 2 December 2015 81 20 December 2017 2 years 18 days died in office 61 prof Lech Morawski 80 2 December 2015 81 12 July 2017 1 year 222 days died in office 67 dr hab Grzegorz Jedrejek 82 27 February 2017 19 January 2020 83 2 years 326 days died in office No Full name d Sejm Term as a Justice Term lengthSee also editJudiciary Rule of law Rule According to Higher Law Supreme Court of Poland 2015 present Polish constitutional crisisNotes edit a b c According to the effective law the Article 10 2 of the Act of 30 November 2016 on organisation and mode of proceedings before the Constitutional Tribunal which came in force on 3 January 2017 84 after Przylebska s appointment as the President the term of the President of the Constitutional Tribunal lasts 6 years Therefore Przylebska s term should have ended on 21 December 2022 Przylebska and her PiS backers however believed her term as President was not actually due to expire until December 2024 since this is when her term as a judge in general expires as of 6 March 2024 she continued to sit as President of the Tribunal 85 86 87 a b c d 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 15 a b c d e The 8th Sejm elected prof Henryk Cioch Lech Morawski and dr hab Mariusz Muszynski even though prof Roman Hauser Krzysztof Slebzak and Andrzej Jakubecki had been elected by the 7th Sejm in advance The 3 seats terms were to end after the 2015 election but during the recess leaving room for conflicting interpretation of the constitution Since the Henryk Cioch and Lech Morawski died during their terms dr hab Jaroslaw Wyrembak and Justyn Piskorski who were elected on their place are also considered disputed 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 15 References edit a b Dz U z 1982 r nr 11 poz 83 permanent dead link a b c d e Skrzydlo Wieslaw Grabowska Sabina Grabowski red Radoslaw 2009 Konstytucja Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej Komentarz encyklopedyczny Warsaw Wolters Kluwer Polska ISBN 978 83 7601 686 3 a b c d e f Alberski Robert 2010 Trybunal Konstytucyjny w polskich systemach politycznych Wroclaw Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Wroclawskiego ISBN 978 83 229 3146 2 a b c Kryszkiewicz Malgorzata Osiecki Grzegorz 2016 Twarda linia Prawa i Sprawiedliwosci Dziennik Gazeta Prawna Prezes polskiego TK o slowach prezesa niemieckiego TK jestem zazenowana Onet pl 13 May 2020 Archived from the original on 13 May 2020 Retrieved 13 May 2020 prof Marcin Matczak Poland s Constitutional Crisis Facts and interpretations PDF Archived PDF from the original on 13 May 2020 Retrieved 13 May 2020 Dominika Sitnicka 22 April 2020 Captured Constitutional Tribunal rules on the Supreme Court Implementation of CJEU judgment inconsistent with EU law Rule of Law Archived from the original on 13 May 2020 Retrieved 13 May 2020 Tomasz Tadeusz Koncewicz 13 March 2020 From Constitutional to Political Justice The Tragic Trajectories of the Polish Constitutional Court Reconnect EU Archived from the original on 13 May 2020 Retrieved 13 May 2020 Biernat Stanislaw Debowska Romanowska Teresa et al 10 February 2020 Constitutional Tribunal has virtually been abolished announce retired judges Ruleoflaw pl Archived from the original on 29 October 2020 Retrieved 28 October 2020 Tilles Daniel 4 March 2024 Polish government unveils planned overhaul of defective constitutional court Notes from Poland Retrieved 6 March 2024 Planowanie rodziny ochrona plodu ludzkiego i warunki dopuszczalnosci przerywania ciazy Trybunal Konstytucyjny 22 October 2020 Archived from the original on 10 February 2021 Retrieved 27 October 2020 Poland The Constitutional Court Repeals Eugenic Abortion ECLJ 23 October 2020 Ocena zgodnosci z Konstytucja RP wybranych przepisow Traktatu o Unii Europejskiej Trybunal Konstytucyjny 7 October 2021 Retrieved 12 October 2021 a b c Polexit Fury in Brussels after Warsaw court rules Polish Constitution overrides EU law Euronews 8 October 2021 Retrieved 12 October 2021 a b The Constitution of the Republic of Poland Sejm W zwiazku ze zlozona rezygnacja Uchwala Sejmu Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej z dnia 26 maja 1993 r w sprawie odwolania Prezesa Trybunalu Konstytucyjnego M P Nr 28 poz 290 odwolany ze stanowiska z chwila wyboru nowego Prezesa TK W zwiazku z rezygnacja poprzednika w trakcje kadencji Uchwala Sejmu Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej z dnia 19 listopada 1993 r w sprawie wyboru Prezesa Trybunalu Konstytucyjnego M P Nr 62 poz 558 powolany na stanowisko Prezesa TK M P z 1998 r Nr 1 poz 2 M P z 2006 r Nr 80 poz 804 M P z 2008 r Nr 53 poz 470 Nominated by Freedom Union M P z 2015 r poz 1186 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 56 M P z 2015 r poz 1185 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 56 M P z 2016 r poz 393 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 369 M P z 2016 r poz 1206 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 1046 M P z 2017 r Nr poz 610 prezydent pl Oficjalna strona Prezydenta Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej Aktualnosci Wydarzenia Prezydent odebral slubowanie od sedziego Trybunalu Konstytucyjnego www prezydent pl Archived from the original on 1 July 2017 Retrieved 28 June 2017 M P z 2019 r Nr poz 414 Oficjalna strona Prezydenta Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej Aktualnosci Nominacje Prezydent przyjal slubowanie od nowego sedziego TK www prezydent pl Archived from the original on 9 May 2019 Retrieved 9 May 2019 M P z 2019 r Nr 0 poz 1132 a b c Slubowanie nowych sedziow TK prezydent pl 5 December 2019 Archived from the original on 6 December 2019 Retrieved 6 December 2019 M P z 2019 r Nr 0 poz 1133 M P z 2019 r Nr 0 poz 1134 M P z 2019 r Nr 0 poz 1197 Oficjalna strona Prezydenta Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej Aktualnosci Nominacje Slubowanie sedziego Trybunalu Konstytucyjnego www prezydent pl Archived from the original on 18 October 2021 Retrieved 7 January 2020 M P z 2020 r Nr 0 poz 340 Oficjalna strona Prezydenta Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej Aktualnosci Nominacje Slubowanie sedziego Trybunalu Konstytucyjnego www prezydent pl Archived from the original on 29 September 2020 Retrieved 9 April 2020 M P z 2022 r Nr poz 203 Slubowanie sedziego TK in Polish Oficjalna strona Prezydenta Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej 16 February 2022 Archived from the original on 16 February 2022 Retrieved 16 February 2022 Trybunal w Strasburgu TK z dublerem nie jest sadem zgodnym z prawem wyborcza pl 7 May 2021 Judy Dempsey 4 May 2021 Poland s Constitution Under Siege Carnegie Europe Retrieved 29 May 2021 Obowiazek panstwa czlonkowskiego UE polegajacy na wykonywaniu srodkow tymczasowych odnoszacych sie do ksztaltu ustroju i funkcjonowania konstytucyjnych organow wladzy sadowniczej tego panstwa tribunal gov pl in Polish 14 July 2021 Retrieved 19 July 2021 Wybrana w miejsce Henryka de Fiumel M P z 1993 r Nr 10 poz 67 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 755 a b c d e f M P z 1993 r Nr 62 poz 557 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 89 A M P z 1994 r Nr 33 poz 263 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 393 M P z 1995 r Nr 37 poz 440 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 1143 a b c M P z 1997 r Nr 82 poz 789 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 11 posiedzenie 1 glosowanie nr 1 a b c M P z 1997 r Nr 83 poz 810 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 12 posiedzenie 3 glosowanie nr 2 M P z 1998 r Nr 46 poz 646 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 765 posiedzenie 39 glosowanie nr 8 M P z 1999 r Nr 23 poz 332 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 1159 posiedzenie 52 glosowanie nr 10 M P z 2001 r Nr 9 poz 149 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 2565 posiedzenie nr 102 glosowanie nr 230 a b c d M P z 2001 r Nr 42 poz 672 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 31 posiedzenie 4 glosowanie nr 3 M P z 2002 r Nr 21 poz 371 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 435 posiedzenie 22 glosowanie nr 196 M P z 2003 r Nr 37 poz 514 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 1709 posiedzenie 52 glosowanie nr 70 a b c M P z 2006 r Nr 80 poz 792 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 1025 M P z 2006 r Nr 84 poz 842 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 1083 Zlozyla slubowanie i podjela obowiazki sedziego 29 grudnia 2006 M P z 2006 r Nr 89 poz 919 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 1157 Zlozyla slubowanie i podjela obowiazki sedziego 6 marca 2007 M P z 2006 r Nr 89 poz 918 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 1157 Zlozyl slubowanie i podjal obowiazki sedziego 8 maja 2007 M P z 2007 r Nr 29 poz 320 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 1637 Zlozyl slubowanie i podjal obowiazki sedziego 14 stycznia 2008 M P z 2008 r Nr 100 poz 1079 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 26 M P z 2008 r Nr 47 poz 420 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 554 Zlozyla slubowanie i podjela obowiazki sedziego 17 maja 2010 M P z 2010 r Nr 38 poz 525 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 2918 a b c Gazeta Wyborcza ost spr 27 11 2010 a b c M P z 2010 r Nr 93 poz 1067 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 3573 Zlozyla slubowanie i podjela obowiazki sedziego 11 stycznia 2011 M P z 2011 r Nr 4 poz 39 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 3676 M P z 2011 r Nr 45 poz 492 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 4144 M P z 2012 r poz 506 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 507 M P z 2015 r poz 1038 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 3954 M P z 2015 r poz 1040 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 3955 M P z 2015 r poz 1039 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 3956 M P z 2015 r poz 1041 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 3957 M P z 2015 r poz 1042 Przebieg procesu legislacyjnego druk nr 3958 a b Zlozyl slubowanie 3 grudnia 2015 dopuszczony orzekania 20 grudnia 2016 a b Kadencje sedziow zestawienie M P z 2017 r Nr 0 poz 224 Prof Jedrejek nowym sedzia TK Prezydent przyjal slubowanie 27 February 2017 Retrieved 27 February 2017 Ustawa z dnia 30 listopada 2016 r o organizacji i trybie postepowania przed Trybunalem Konstytucyjnym Act of 30 November 2016 on organisation and mode of proceedings before the Constitutional Tribunal Dz U z 2016 r poz 2072 Trybunal Konstytucyjny Julia Przylebska odwolala rozprawe Bylo za malo sedziow TVN24 tvn24 pl in Polish TVN 24 9 May 2023 Retrieved 10 May 2023 Ast Julia Przylebska jest prezesem Trybunalu Konstytucyjnego RMF 24 rmf24 pl in Polish RMF FM Retrieved 10 May 2023 Tilles Daniel 5 January 2023 Polish constitutional court judges rebel against chief justice demanding she step down Notes from Poland Retrieved 6 March 2024 Shotter James Huber Evon 13 July 2017 Poland s ruling party drafts bill to force judges to step down Financial Times Archived from the original on 11 December 2022 Retrieved 14 July 2017 External links edit nbsp Media related to Constitutional Tribunal of Poland at Wikimedia Commons Official website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Constitutional Tribunal Poland amp oldid 1220966632, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.