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Polish constitutional crisis

The Polish constitutional crisis, also known as the Polish rule-of-law crisis, is a political conflict ongoing since 2015 in which the Polish government has been accused of failing to comply with European and Polish constitutional law. The 2015 elections resulted in the Law and Justice party (Prawo i Sprawiedliwość, PiS) winning control of both the presidency and the parliament. With this government trifecta (as a result of its participation in the United Right), PiS used its power to appoint judges to the Constitutional Tribunal in 2015, leading to the 2015 Polish Constitutional Court crisis. The government of Poland continued to expand its hold on the judiciary resulting in the 2017 Supreme Court crisis, and the 2019 Polish judicial disciplinary panel law. These events allowed the legislature and executive of the Polish government to have de facto control over judges and their appointments.[1]

These moves have been condemned by the European Union which initiated an Article 7 process against Poland. The European Commission referred Poland to the European Court of Justice (ECJ), stating in 2017, "the executive and legislative branches have been systematically enabled to politically interfere in the composition, powers, administration and functioning of the judicial branch."[2] In 2019 and 2020, the ECJ ruled against Poland in Commission v Poland, ordering it to suspend several laws which interfere with the independence of the judiciary, but these rulings have been largely ignored in Poland.[3] The crisis briefly jeopardised the EU coronavirus budget which allowed funds to be made available to EU member states on the condition of "rule of law", a clause which both the Polish government and Hungarian government threatened to veto in 2020.[4]

Since the changes to the judiciary, a number of protests took place as a result of either the changes themselves, rulings by the new judiciary, or other legislative action deemed to break European or international human rights legislation. This includes the Black Protest and Women's Strike against restrictions to women's rights (especially with regards to abortion), the Polish Sejm Crisis against restrictions of press freedoms, and the 2020 LGBT protests in Poland against restrictions to LGBT rights,[5] and the 2023 Polish protests in response to the oppression committed by the government by these actions. These rulings and legislative actions with the corresponding protest action have exacerbated the crisis in Poland.

After the 2023 Polish parliamentary election, the installation the Donald Tusk-led coalition government has started to reverse the PiS reforms, so as to re-establish the rule of law. This is opposed by Duda, who remains President of Poland.

Background edit

Constitutional Tribunal edit

List of TC judges by seniority in June 2015
No Judge [a] 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)

The Constitutional Tribunal (TC) of Poland was founded in 1982 by the government of the Polish People's Republic. It oversees the actions of government, including legislative action, to ensure compliance with the Constitution of Poland. Judges are elected to the court by the Sejm and approved by the President. The court is made up of 15 judges who serve single nine-year terms and which point they are replaced through agreement of the Sejm and President.[7] In 2015, before the crisis, the court was made up of ten justices nominated by the centre-right Civic Platform (PO) and five justices nominated by the right-wing nationalist Law and Justice Party (PiS).

Abortion law in Poland edit

In Poland it was illegal[when?] to have an abortion except where the mother's life was at risk, the pregnancy was a result of rape or if the foetus had "severe and irreparable" impairment. The largely Christian conservative base of PiS follow the Catholic Church teaching on abortion. In 2017, a Pew Research Center poll showed 51% of Poles thought abortion should be illegal in all or most cases.[8]

2015 Polish presidential election edit

In May 2015 Andrzej Duda was elected as President of Poland with a radical right-wing platform, defeating incumbent Bronisław Komorowski of the Civic Platform. Prior to the election, Komorowski was believed to be the favourite to win.[9] Duda promised to block the Constitutional Tribunal nominations of the Civic Platform-controlled Sejm until after the 2015 Polish parliamentary election. The outcome has been described as a shock in many media, as observers feared a potential conflict between Poland and the European Union as well as Duda's authoritarian tendency.[10][11]

European migrant crisis edit

Following the election of Duda, relations between the European Union and Poland soured, especially in relation to the ongoing European migrant crisis, where Duda refused to be part of the European migrant quota plan managed by the European Asylum Support Office, causing the EU to initiate sanctions procedures against Poland and other Visegrád Group member states.[12][13][14]

First Duda term edit

2015 Constitutional Court crisis edit

 
The Constitutional Court in Warsaw
 
Protests against the appointment of new judges to the Constitutional Tribunal at rally organised by the Committee for the Defence of Democracy
 
Protestors for the changes to the Constitutional Tribunal at a Law and Justice rally

Between the election of Duda and the start of the 8th Sejm on 12 November 2015, 5 seats on the TC were due to expire. The 7th Sejm, controlled by PO and its allies completed its election process for replacement judges. However, Duda refused to swear in these nominees until after the sitting of the 8th Sejm.[15] Following the 2015 Polish parliamentary election in October 2015, PiS took control of the Sejm and elected its own five replacement judges, who were elected on 2 December and sworn in on 3 December by Duda.[16] PO claimed this was unlawful,[16] whereas PiS claimed that the initial election of judges by 7th Sejm was unlawful. On 3 December the TC ruled that 3 of the judges nominated by the 7th Sejm were legally elected; 2 were not. Despite the ruling, Duda did not swear in the legally elected judges.[17] 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 TC to allow the judges to hear new cases. The new legislation was signed into law on 28 December. In January 2016, the TC 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".[18][19] 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.[20][21] Protests both for and against the government of Poland occurred in Warsaw and other major Polish cities.[19]

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.[22][23] 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."[24] Hungary declared that it will oppose any sanctions against Poland.[25]

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.[26] 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".[27]

In July 2016, the European Commission issued a statement outlining its recommendations regarding "the rule of law in Poland", including the swearing-in of the three judges elected by the 7th Sejm and the adherence to the March 2016 TC ruling declaring that changes to the structure and functioning of the TC were unconstitutional.[20][28]

2016 protests edit

Sejm Crisis edit

 
Opposition MPs protesting against limits on press freedom

In 2016, the government passed legislation which only allowed a small number of journalists and TV stations to report from parliament. This was seen as a continuation of PiS anti-journalistic policy, and resulted in protests. Inside the parliament building, opposition MPs staged a sit-in, forcing government legislators to pass bills elsewhere, and protestors outside the building gathered, shouting "freedom, equality, democracy".[29]

Black Protest edit

The 8th Sejm held debates on reforming abortion law in Poland, in order to make them more restrictive. The votes on the new restrictive abortion legislation took place on 6 October and were voted down due to domestic and international pressure. Despite a lack of legislative changes, PiS MPs began ligation in order to see abortion become more restrictive.

2017 Supreme Court crisis edit

In 2017 the Sejm and Senate passed a law mandating retirement for all judges aged over 70, unless given an exemption by the Minister of Justice. Following widespread protests this law was vetoed by Duda. A revised bill, mandating retirement at aged 65 was eventually passed and signed by Duda, giving significant control to the government over judges and their livelihoods.[30][31]

In December 2017 the European Commission warned that "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", stating that "Article 7(1) of the Treaty on European Union provides for the Council, acting by a majority of four fifths of its members, to determine that there is a clear risk of a serious breach by a Member State of the common values referred to in Article 2 of the Treaty... The Commission can trigger this process by a reasoned proposal."[2] In December 2018, a new law was signed by Duda, reinstating all judges who had been removed from their posts by the 2017 law — despite this, concerns in the European Union remained.[32] In April 2020, the ECJ ruled that Poland had still "failed to fulfil its obligations" under the Treaties of the European Union.[31][33]

Deforestation edit

 
A fallen tree in Białowieża Forest

Białowieża Forest, an ancient woodland and World Heritage Site, has been subjected to large-scale logging since 2017.[34] 190,000 cubic metres (160,000-180,000 trees) of wood were felled in 2017 alone.[35][36] The European Commission sued Poland at the European Court of Justice, which ruled that logging must be immediately halted as Poland had failed to fulfil its obligations under the Habitats Directive and the Birds Directive,[37][38][39] and threatened to fine the Polish state.[40] UNESCO also requested that the Polish government halt logging in the area.[41] Despite this, the Polish government has continued to allow logging in Białowieża Forest, although at "lower intensity" according to Greenpeace Poland,[42] under the pretext of a bark beetle infestation, a pretext which has been twice rejected by the ECJ.[38][43] However, several years later it turns out that the bark beetle infestation got out of control, causing many more trees to die than would have been necessary, if the infestation had been controlled, by removing all infested and dead trees. Additionally, bordering private forests were lost to the infestation. The owners sued the government for not containing the infestation in time, claiming that the damage could have been prevented, had the expertise of their rangers and forest officials not been overruled by activists and foreign political entities.[44]

LGBT-free zones edit

 
Illegally mounted street sign that created the confusion around the "LGBT Free Zones" and made the story go viral.

In 2019 and 2020, LGBT-free zones were declared across many local authorities in Poland, with over 100 municipalities voting to declare themselves "LGBT-free", meaning free of the popular ideology in their public education programs.[45] Whilst without legal backing, such declaration were found by the European Commissioner for Human Rights as "stigmatisation" which "directly impact" LGBT citizens, contrary to the European Convention on Human Rights and likely prohibited by Article 34 of Constitution of Poland.[46] The European Union broadly denounced these declarations, with the European Parliament voting overwhelming to condemn such declarations.[47] An LGBT activist placed "LGBT - Free Zone" road signs in front of the towns, creating the impression that they were officially placed by the towns and photographed them. These pictures were then used by media outlets all around the world.[48] The misleading presentation made the story go viral, so the young activist's success was recognized by a Obama foundation scholarship.[49] Polish opposition politicians, such as Robert Biedroń, have compared the declaration to the judenfrei zones created by the Nazis in Poland.[50] Due to the breach of Article 2 of the Maastricht Treaty, the European Union's Structural Funds and Cohesion Fund can no longer be used in these areas. However, the Polish government pledged to fill the gap in funding to affected areas, in opposition to the EU but supported by the Catholic Church.[51][52] President Ursula von der Leyen said "LGBTQI-free zones are humanity free zones. And they have no place in our Union" during her State of the Union speech in September 2020, indicating the strength of opposition in the European Union.[53]

2019 Judicial disciplinary panel law edit

On 20 December 2019 the Sejm voted to allow Disciplinary Chamber of the Supreme Court of Poland to remove judges deemed to be partaking in "political activity". This gave the government de facto control of entire judicial arm of the state. The law also gave government greater control over appointment to the position of head judge of the Supreme Court of Poland. The law was criticised by the UN Human Rights Commission which stated the law "risks further undermining" the Polish judiciary.[54] The European Union also criticised the bill, with Poland risking further sanctions under Article 7 and by the European Court of Justice.[54] The EU urged Poland not to pass the bill, and to consult the Venice Commission, yet it passed.[55] The Association of Judges of Ireland condemned the Polish legislation.[56] Koen Lenaerts, President of the Court of Justice of the European Union, warned that "You can’t be a member of the European Union if you don’t have independent, impartial courts operating in accordance with fair trial rule, upholding union law".[57]

The Polish Supreme Court stated that the bill was a "continuation of the lawlessness of the 1980s". According to the court: "Everything is there: a ban on the freedom of speech by judges, the establishment of a surveillance mechanism and a drastic reduction of their right to have profiles on social networks".[58] The Polish Supreme Court, prior to the bill passing, said that Poland overruling the primacy of EU law may force it out of the bloc.[59][60]

Donald Tusk, former European Council president, warned the bill might force Poland out of the EU. Ombudsman Adam Bodnar said the law "violates the Constitution and the ground rules of the rule of law" and "would definitively put Polish courts and judges under the control of the legislative and executive branches of government". Special Rapporteur of the United Nations on the Independence of Judges and Lawyers Diego García Sayán and President of the European Association of Judges José Igreja Matos warned the legislation "runs contrary to judicial independence".[61]

 
Polish Ombudsman since 2015, Adam Bodnar is responsible for defending human rights in Poland and has criticised the Polish government throughout this crisis

COVID-19 reporting edit

On 20 March 2020, the secretary of state of the Ministry of Health, Józefa Szczurek-Żelazko [pl], sent a written statement ordering voivodeship medical consultants to not make statements about SARS-CoV-2, the epidemiological situation, the risks for medical staff or methods of protection from infection, unless they had first consulted with the Ministry of Health or Główny Inspektorat Sanitarny [pl]. Szczurek-Żelazko motivated the order by the need to provide correct, unified information and to avoid unjustified unrest in the medical community.[62]

A surgeons group, Porozumienie Chirurgów SKALPEL, described the order as blackmail and said that it risked catastrophe. The group stated that the COVID-19 pandemic showed Poland as "not at all prepared for crisis situations" with a "lack of equipment, basic personal protective gear and disinfectant materials and a lack of standards and procedures".[63]

On 25 March 2020, the Polish Ombudsman Adam Bodnar sent a letter to the Minister of Health, Szumowski, stating that medical staff's freedom of speech and is guaranteed under Articles 2 and 54 of the Polish Constitution and the right of the public to information is guaranteed under Article 61 of the constitution. Bodnar stated that firing or punishing doctors for informing the public during the pandemic could be a violation of the "obligatory standards". Bodnar asked if Szumowski was aware of the situation and requested a clarification of policy.[64]

2019–20 elections edit

In 2019 and 2020 PiS and the United Right retained control of the parliament and presidency of Poland. In the 2019 Polish parliamentary election, which had the highest turnout since the fall of communism in Poland,[65] PiS retained 43.59% of the popular vote for the Sejm and 44.56% of the vote for the Senate,[66] marking a positive swing in these elections.

In 2020, the 2020 Polish presidential election took place, with Duda winning with 51.03% of the vote. Independent observers from the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe found that Telewizja Polska, the Polish public broadcasting service, was inappropriately and "clearly biased" towards Duda and PiS in both elections.[67][68]

Second Duda term edit

LGBT rights edit

 
The Rainbow Madonna

In August 2020, following the arrest of Margot, an LGBT activist, several mass demonstrations took place across Poland. In central Warsaw, this protest degenerated and led to a violent police response, in turn resulting in further protest action. These protested against the "LGBT-free zones", police violence and human rights rollbacks by the government.[69][70][71] It has been described by some media outlets as "Poland's Stonewall".[70]

In January 2021, the trial of three Polish activists began, charged with offending religious feelings after creating and posting posters of the Black Madonna of Częstochowa with the rainbow flag, popularly known as the Rainbow Madonna.[72]

Abortion rights edit

 
October 2020 protests against abortion restrictions in Kraków, Poland

On 22 October 2020, the Constitutional Tribunal, with disputed judges, ruled that abortion in cases of disability or life-limiting illness were unconstitutional, further limiting abortion rights in Poland. The decision was nearly unanimous, with judges ruling 11–2 in favour of limiting abortion. The court found it violated the right to human dignity enshrined in the Polish constitution.[73] This precipitated significant protests and civil unrest. Protests began on the day of the ruling, but have continued, especially in major cities such as Warsaw, which saw an estimated 100,000 people protest on 30 October.[74] Protests continued throughout November and December 2020. On 27 January 2021, the ruling was formally published in Dziennik Ustaw and enforcement of the ruling began across Poland, precipitating further waves of unrest. Poland now has one of the most restrictive abortion laws in Europe, described as a "near-total ban" by the BBC as 98% of previous abortions in Poland took place under the laws now deemed unconstitutional.[75]

Removal of PiS government edit

In 2023, the Civic Coalition, a coalition led by Donald Tusk, won the 2023 Polish parliamentary election, and Tusk began a series of measures as Prime Minister to roll back Duda's reforms and to restore the rule of law to Poland, opposed by Duda, who remained President.[76]

In January 2024, two convicted MPs were arrested in the Polish presidential palace, where Duda had given them refuge from serving their prison sentences.[76]

In March 2024, the Sejm confirmed 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 [77]

Opposition groups edit

Domestic edit

Parliamentary parties edit

Other edit

International edit

Role of the European Union edit

Under European Union law, the European Court of Justice may strike down member state law if the laws are incompatible with Treaties of the European Union,[78] or if they concern one of the shared competences.[79] Examples of the former include judicial independence, human rights (including women's rights and LGBT rights) and freedom of the press. Thus, the European Commission refers to a lack of rule of law in Poland, as Union law is not being applied.[2][3][4][28] Article 7 of the Treaty on European Union allows the Union to suspend the rights of membership if a nation breaches the vaguely formulated Article 2, namely "respect for human dignity, freedom, democracy, equality, the rule of law and respect for human rights, including the rights of persons belonging to minorities". However, this would be subject to a veto by any other member state, with Hungary indicating it would veto such action. Despite this, attempts have been made to introduce sanctions or make funding conditional on the rule-of-law, such as in the Next Generation EU budget,[4] Structural Funds and Cohesion Fund.[51]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ 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).[6]

References edit

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polish, constitutional, crisis, this, article, needs, updated, please, help, update, this, article, reflect, recent, events, newly, available, information, january, 2024, also, known, polish, rule, crisis, political, conflict, ongoing, since, 2015, which, poli. This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information January 2024 The Polish constitutional crisis also known as the Polish rule of law crisis is a political conflict ongoing since 2015 in which the Polish government has been accused of failing to comply with European and Polish constitutional law The 2015 elections resulted in the Law and Justice party Prawo i Sprawiedliwosc PiS winning control of both the presidency and the parliament With this government trifecta as a result of its participation in the United Right PiS used its power to appoint judges to the Constitutional Tribunal in 2015 leading to the 2015 Polish Constitutional Court crisis The government of Poland continued to expand its hold on the judiciary resulting in the 2017 Supreme Court crisis and the 2019 Polish judicial disciplinary panel law These events allowed the legislature and executive of the Polish government to have de facto control over judges and their appointments 1 These moves have been condemned by the European Union which initiated an Article 7 process against Poland The European Commission referred Poland to the European Court of Justice ECJ stating in 2017 the executive and legislative branches have been systematically enabled to politically interfere in the composition powers administration and functioning of the judicial branch 2 In 2019 and 2020 the ECJ ruled against Poland in Commission v Poland ordering it to suspend several laws which interfere with the independence of the judiciary but these rulings have been largely ignored in Poland 3 The crisis briefly jeopardised the EU coronavirus budget which allowed funds to be made available to EU member states on the condition of rule of law a clause which both the Polish government and Hungarian government threatened to veto in 2020 4 Since the changes to the judiciary a number of protests took place as a result of either the changes themselves rulings by the new judiciary or other legislative action deemed to break European or international human rights legislation This includes the Black Protest and Women s Strike against restrictions to women s rights especially with regards to abortion the Polish Sejm Crisis against restrictions of press freedoms and the 2020 LGBT protests in Poland against restrictions to LGBT rights 5 and the 2023 Polish protests in response to the oppression committed by the government by these actions These rulings and legislative actions with the corresponding protest action have exacerbated the crisis in Poland After the 2023 Polish parliamentary election the installation the Donald Tusk led coalition government has started to reverse the PiS reforms so as to re establish the rule of law This is opposed by Duda who remains President of Poland Contents 1 Background 1 1 Constitutional Tribunal 1 2 Abortion law in Poland 1 3 2015 Polish presidential election 1 4 European migrant crisis 2 First Duda term 2 1 2015 Constitutional Court crisis 2 2 2016 protests 2 2 1 Sejm Crisis 2 2 2 Black Protest 2 3 2017 Supreme Court crisis 2 4 Deforestation 2 5 LGBT free zones 2 6 2019 Judicial disciplinary panel law 2 7 COVID 19 reporting 2 8 2019 20 elections 3 Second Duda term 3 1 LGBT rights 3 2 Abortion rights 4 Removal of PiS government 5 Opposition groups 5 1 Domestic 5 1 1 Parliamentary parties 5 1 2 Other 5 2 International 6 Role of the European Union 7 See also 8 Notes 9 ReferencesBackground editConstitutional Tribunal edit Main article Constitutional Tribunal Poland List of TC judges by seniority in June 2015 No Judge a 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 The Constitutional Tribunal TC of Poland was founded in 1982 by the government of the Polish People s Republic It oversees the actions of government including legislative action to ensure compliance with the Constitution of Poland Judges are elected to the court by the Sejm and approved by the President The court is made up of 15 judges who serve single nine year terms and which point they are replaced through agreement of the Sejm and President 7 In 2015 before the crisis the court was made up of ten justices nominated by the centre right Civic Platform PO and five justices nominated by the right wing nationalist Law and Justice Party PiS Abortion law in Poland edit Main article Abortion in Poland In Poland it was illegal when to have an abortion except where the mother s life was at risk the pregnancy was a result of rape or if the foetus had severe and irreparable impairment The largely Christian conservative base of PiS follow the Catholic Church teaching on abortion In 2017 a Pew Research Center poll showed 51 of Poles thought abortion should be illegal in all or most cases 8 2015 Polish presidential election edit 2015 Polish presidential election nbsp Andrzej Duda Law and Justice PiS nbsp Bronislaw Komorowski endorsed by Civic Platform PO In May 2015 Andrzej Duda was elected as President of Poland with a radical right wing platform defeating incumbent Bronislaw Komorowski of the Civic Platform Prior to the election Komorowski was believed to be the favourite to win 9 Duda promised to block the Constitutional Tribunal nominations of the Civic Platform controlled Sejm until after the 2015 Polish parliamentary election The outcome has been described as a shock in many media as observers feared a potential conflict between Poland and the European Union as well as Duda s authoritarian tendency 10 11 European migrant crisis edit Following the election of Duda relations between the European Union and Poland soured especially in relation to the ongoing European migrant crisis where Duda refused to be part of the European migrant quota plan managed by the European Asylum Support Office causing the EU to initiate sanctions procedures against Poland and other Visegrad Group member states 12 13 14 First Duda term edit2015 Constitutional Court crisis edit Main article 2015 Polish Constitutional Court crisis nbsp The Constitutional Court in Warsaw nbsp Protests against the appointment of new judges to the Constitutional Tribunal at rally organised by the Committee for the Defence of Democracy nbsp Protestors for the changes to the Constitutional Tribunal at a Law and Justice rally Between the election of Duda and the start of the 8th Sejm on 12 November 2015 5 seats on the TC were due to expire The 7th Sejm controlled by PO and its allies completed its election process for replacement judges However Duda refused to swear in these nominees until after the sitting of the 8th Sejm 15 Following the 2015 Polish parliamentary election in October 2015 PiS took control of the Sejm and elected its own five replacement judges who were elected on 2 December and sworn in on 3 December by Duda 16 PO claimed this was unlawful 16 whereas PiS claimed that the initial election of judges by 7th Sejm was unlawful On 3 December the TC ruled that 3 of the judges nominated by the 7th Sejm were legally elected 2 were not Despite the ruling Duda did not swear in the legally elected judges 17 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 TC to allow the judges to hear new cases The new legislation was signed into law on 28 December In January 2016 the TC 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 18 19 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 20 21 Protests both for and against the government of Poland occurred in Warsaw and other major Polish cities 19 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 22 23 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 24 Hungary declared that it will oppose any sanctions against Poland 25 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 26 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 27 In July 2016 the European Commission issued a statement outlining its recommendations regarding the rule of law in Poland including the swearing in of the three judges elected by the 7th Sejm and the adherence to the March 2016 TC ruling declaring that changes to the structure and functioning of the TC were unconstitutional 20 28 2016 protests edit Sejm Crisis edit Main article December 2016 Polish protests nbsp Opposition MPs protesting against limits on press freedom In 2016 the government passed legislation which only allowed a small number of journalists and TV stations to report from parliament This was seen as a continuation of PiS anti journalistic policy and resulted in protests Inside the parliament building opposition MPs staged a sit in forcing government legislators to pass bills elsewhere and protestors outside the building gathered shouting freedom equality democracy 29 Black Protest edit Further information Abortion in Poland Black Protest The 8th Sejm held debates on reforming abortion law in Poland in order to make them more restrictive The votes on the new restrictive abortion legislation took place on 6 October and were voted down due to domestic and international pressure Despite a lack of legislative changes PiS MPs began ligation in order to see abortion become more restrictive 2017 Supreme Court crisis edit See also Supreme Court of Poland In 2017 the Sejm and Senate passed a law mandating retirement for all judges aged over 70 unless given an exemption by the Minister of Justice Following widespread protests this law was vetoed by Duda A revised bill mandating retirement at aged 65 was eventually passed and signed by Duda giving significant control to the government over judges and their livelihoods 30 31 In December 2017 the European Commission warned that 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 stating that Article 7 1 of the Treaty on European Union provides for the Council acting by a majority of four fifths of its members to determine that there is a clear risk of a serious breach by a Member State of the common values referred to in Article 2 of the Treaty The Commission can trigger this process by a reasoned proposal 2 In December 2018 a new law was signed by Duda reinstating all judges who had been removed from their posts by the 2017 law despite this concerns in the European Union remained 32 In April 2020 the ECJ ruled that Poland had still failed to fulfil its obligations under the Treaties of the European Union 31 33 Deforestation edit nbsp A fallen tree in Bialowieza Forest Bialowieza Forest an ancient woodland and World Heritage Site has been subjected to large scale logging since 2017 34 190 000 cubic metres 160 000 180 000 trees of wood were felled in 2017 alone 35 36 The European Commission sued Poland at the European Court of Justice which ruled that logging must be immediately halted as Poland had failed to fulfil its obligations under the Habitats Directive and the Birds Directive 37 38 39 and threatened to fine the Polish state 40 UNESCO also requested that the Polish government halt logging in the area 41 Despite this the Polish government has continued to allow logging in Bialowieza Forest although at lower intensity according to Greenpeace Poland 42 under the pretext of a bark beetle infestation a pretext which has been twice rejected by the ECJ 38 43 However several years later it turns out that the bark beetle infestation got out of control causing many more trees to die than would have been necessary if the infestation had been controlled by removing all infested and dead trees Additionally bordering private forests were lost to the infestation The owners sued the government for not containing the infestation in time claiming that the damage could have been prevented had the expertise of their rangers and forest officials not been overruled by activists and foreign political entities 44 LGBT free zones edit Main article LGBT free zone nbsp Illegally mounted street sign that created the confusion around the LGBT Free Zones and made the story go viral In 2019 and 2020 LGBT free zones were declared across many local authorities in Poland with over 100 municipalities voting to declare themselves LGBT free meaning free of the popular ideology in their public education programs 45 Whilst without legal backing such declaration were found by the European Commissioner for Human Rights as stigmatisation which directly impact LGBT citizens contrary to the European Convention on Human Rights and likely prohibited by Article 34 of Constitution of Poland 46 The European Union broadly denounced these declarations with the European Parliament voting overwhelming to condemn such declarations 47 An LGBT activist placed LGBT Free Zone road signs in front of the towns creating the impression that they were officially placed by the towns and photographed them These pictures were then used by media outlets all around the world 48 The misleading presentation made the story go viral so the young activist s success was recognized by a Obama foundation scholarship 49 Polish opposition politicians such as Robert Biedron have compared the declaration to the judenfrei zones created by the Nazis in Poland 50 Due to the breach of Article 2 of the Maastricht Treaty the European Union s Structural Funds and Cohesion Fund can no longer be used in these areas However the Polish government pledged to fill the gap in funding to affected areas in opposition to the EU but supported by the Catholic Church 51 52 President Ursula von der Leyen said LGBTQI free zones are humanity free zones And they have no place in our Union during her State of the Union speech in September 2020 indicating the strength of opposition in the European Union 53 2019 Judicial disciplinary panel law edit Main article Polish judicial disciplinary panel lawOn 20 December 2019 the Sejm voted to allow Disciplinary Chamber of the Supreme Court of Poland to remove judges deemed to be partaking in political activity This gave the government de facto control of entire judicial arm of the state The law also gave government greater control over appointment to the position of head judge of the Supreme Court of Poland The law was criticised by the UN Human Rights Commission which stated the law risks further undermining the Polish judiciary 54 The European Union also criticised the bill with Poland risking further sanctions under Article 7 and by the European Court of Justice 54 The EU urged Poland not to pass the bill and to consult the Venice Commission yet it passed 55 The Association of Judges of Ireland condemned the Polish legislation 56 Koen Lenaerts President of the Court of Justice of the European Union warned that You can t be a member of the European Union if you don t have independent impartial courts operating in accordance with fair trial rule upholding union law 57 The Polish Supreme Court stated that the bill was a continuation of the lawlessness of the 1980s According to the court Everything is there a ban on the freedom of speech by judges the establishment of a surveillance mechanism and a drastic reduction of their right to have profiles on social networks 58 The Polish Supreme Court prior to the bill passing said that Poland overruling the primacy of EU law may force it out of the bloc 59 60 Donald Tusk former European Council president warned the bill might force Poland out of the EU Ombudsman Adam Bodnar said the law violates the Constitution and the ground rules of the rule of law and would definitively put Polish courts and judges under the control of the legislative and executive branches of government Special Rapporteur of the United Nations on the Independence of Judges and Lawyers Diego Garcia Sayan and President of the European Association of Judges Jose Igreja Matos warned the legislation runs contrary to judicial independence 61 nbsp Polish Ombudsman since 2015 Adam Bodnar is responsible for defending human rights in Poland and has criticised the Polish government throughout this crisis COVID 19 reporting edit Further information COVID 19 pandemic in Poland On 20 March 2020 the secretary of state of the Ministry of Health Jozefa Szczurek Zelazko pl sent a written statement ordering voivodeship medical consultants to not make statements about SARS CoV 2 the epidemiological situation the risks for medical staff or methods of protection from infection unless they had first consulted with the Ministry of Health or Glowny Inspektorat Sanitarny pl Szczurek Zelazko motivated the order by the need to provide correct unified information and to avoid unjustified unrest in the medical community 62 A surgeons group Porozumienie Chirurgow SKALPEL described the order as blackmail and said that it risked catastrophe The group stated that the COVID 19 pandemic showed Poland as not at all prepared for crisis situations with a lack of equipment basic personal protective gear and disinfectant materials and a lack of standards and procedures 63 On 25 March 2020 the Polish Ombudsman Adam Bodnar sent a letter to the Minister of Health Szumowski stating that medical staff s freedom of speech and is guaranteed under Articles 2 and 54 of the Polish Constitution and the right of the public to information is guaranteed under Article 61 of the constitution Bodnar stated that firing or punishing doctors for informing the public during the pandemic could be a violation of the obligatory standards Bodnar asked if Szumowski was aware of the situation and requested a clarification of policy 64 2019 20 elections edit 2020 Polish presidential election nbsp Andrzej Duda endorsed by Law and Justice PiS nbsp Rafal Trzaskowski Civic Platform KO In 2019 and 2020 PiS and the United Right retained control of the parliament and presidency of Poland In the 2019 Polish parliamentary election which had the highest turnout since the fall of communism in Poland 65 PiS retained 43 59 of the popular vote for the Sejm and 44 56 of the vote for the Senate 66 marking a positive swing in these elections In 2020 the 2020 Polish presidential election took place with Duda winning with 51 03 of the vote Independent observers from the Organization for Security and Co operation in Europe found that Telewizja Polska the Polish public broadcasting service was inappropriately and clearly biased towards Duda and PiS in both elections 67 68 Second Duda term editLGBT rights edit Main article Rainbow Night nbsp The Rainbow Madonna In August 2020 following the arrest of Margot an LGBT activist several mass demonstrations took place across Poland In central Warsaw this protest degenerated and led to a violent police response in turn resulting in further protest action These protested against the LGBT free zones police violence and human rights rollbacks by the government 69 70 71 It has been described by some media outlets as Poland s Stonewall 70 In January 2021 the trial of three Polish activists began charged with offending religious feelings after creating and posting posters of the Black Madonna of Czestochowa with the rainbow flag popularly known as the Rainbow Madonna 72 Abortion rights edit Main article 2020 21 women s strike protests in Poland nbsp October 2020 protests against abortion restrictions in Krakow Poland On 22 October 2020 the Constitutional Tribunal with disputed judges ruled that abortion in cases of disability or life limiting illness were unconstitutional further limiting abortion rights in Poland The decision was nearly unanimous with judges ruling 11 2 in favour of limiting abortion The court found it violated the right to human dignity enshrined in the Polish constitution 73 This precipitated significant protests and civil unrest Protests began on the day of the ruling but have continued especially in major cities such as Warsaw which saw an estimated 100 000 people protest on 30 October 74 Protests continued throughout November and December 2020 On 27 January 2021 the ruling was formally published in Dziennik Ustaw and enforcement of the ruling began across Poland precipitating further waves of unrest Poland now has one of the most restrictive abortion laws in Europe described as a near total ban by the BBC as 98 of previous abortions in Poland took place under the laws now deemed unconstitutional 75 Removal of PiS government editIn 2023 the Civic Coalition a coalition led by Donald Tusk won the 2023 Polish parliamentary election and Tusk began a series of measures as Prime Minister to roll back Duda s reforms and to restore the rule of law to Poland opposed by Duda who remained President 76 In January 2024 two convicted MPs were arrested in the Polish presidential palace where Duda had given them refuge from serving their prison sentences 76 In March 2024 the Sejm confirmed 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 77 Opposition groups editDomestic edit Parliamentary parties edit Civic Coalition the main opposition Civic Platform the second largest party in the Sejm The Left political alliance of left wing parties Other edit All Poland Women s Strike social movement for women s rights Consultative Council strategy council for the All Poland Women s Strike Campaign Against Homophobia gay rights organisation Citizens of Poland pro democracy civic movement Committee for the Defence of Democracy NGO promoting European values Polish Judges Association International edit Amnesty International European Union Greenpeace Helsinki Foundation for Human Rights Women on WebRole of the European Union editSee also Poland in the European Union and Rule of Law Conditionality Regulation Under European Union law the European Court of Justice may strike down member state law if the laws are incompatible with Treaties of the European Union 78 or if they concern one of the shared competences 79 Examples of the former include judicial independence human rights including women s rights and LGBT rights and freedom of the press Thus the European Commission refers to a lack of rule of law in Poland as Union law is not being applied 2 3 4 28 Article 7 of the Treaty on European Union allows the Union to suspend the rights of membership if a nation breaches the vaguely formulated Article 2 namely respect for human dignity freedom democracy equality the rule of law and respect for human rights including the rights of persons belonging to minorities However this would be subject to a veto by any other member state with Hungary indicating it would veto such action Despite this attempts have been made to introduce sanctions or make funding conditional on the rule of law such as in the Next Generation EU budget 4 Structural Funds and Cohesion Fund 51 See also edit nbsp Poland portal nbsp European Union portal Poland in the European Union Polexit Anti LGBT rhetoric Democratic backsliding European Charter of Fundamental Rights European Convention on Human Rights Polish OmbudsmanNotes edit 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 6 References edit Poland Freedom House Retrieved 2020 11 15 a b c Rule of Law European Commission acts to defend judicial independence in Poland European Commission Retrieved 2020 11 15 a b Morijn John 2020 03 10 Commission v Poland What Happened What it Means What it Will Take Verfassungsblog On Matters Constitutional doi 10 17176 20200310 215105 0 Retrieved 2020 11 15 a b c Rule of law fears remain in Poland despite EU compromise The Guardian 2020 12 11 Retrieved 2020 12 13 UKCLA 2020 11 12 Atina Krajewska The judgment of the Polish Constitutional Tribunal on abortion a dark day for Poland for Europe and for democracy UK Constitutional Law Association Retrieved 2020 11 15 The Constitution of the Republic of Poland Sejm The Constitutional Tribunal of the Republic of Poland Association of Constitutional Justice of the Countries of the Baltic and Black Sea Regions Retrieved 2020 11 15 Religious Belief and National Belonging in Central and Eastern Europe PDF Pew Research Center May 2015 Poland election President Komorowski loses to rival Duda BBC News 2015 05 25 Retrieved 2020 11 24 Cichowlas Ola 22 May 2015 Why Poland s presidential election may shake up the European Union Reuters Foy Henry May 25 2015 Duda presidential victory stuns Poland Financial Times Poland s Duda Blasts EU Dictate of the Strong on Migrants Bloomberg com 2015 09 08 Retrieved 2021 02 12 EU opens sanctions procedure against Hungary Poland and Czech Republic over refugees www euractiv com 2017 06 13 Retrieved 2021 02 12 Relocation and Resettlement State of Play PDF European Commission 8 February 2017 Retrieved 12 February 2021 Szczerbiak Aleks 31 December 2015 Who is winning Poland s constitutional tribunal war The Polish Politics Blog a b Kisilowski Maciej 2015 12 08 Poland s overnight court breaks all the rules POLITICO Retrieved 2016 03 30 President Duda won t implement constitutional tribunal ruling Warsaw Business Journal 8 December 2015 Archived from the original on 2016 01 05 Retrieved 2015 12 27 Goettig Marcin 22 December 2015 Polish parliament passes contentious amendment to top court law Reuters a b Polish protests as government rejects court ruling BBC News 12 March 2016 a b Commission adopts Rule of Law Opinion on the situation in Poland European Commission Retrieved 2020 11 29 Bruxelles lance une enquete preliminaire inedite sur la situation de l Etat de droit en Pologne Le Monde fr in French 2016 01 13 ISSN 1950 6244 Retrieved 2016 12 04 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 a b Commission Opinion on the Rule of Law in Poland and the Rule of Law Framework Questions amp Answers European Commission Retrieved 2020 12 13 Poland protests Crowds renew calls for press freedom BBC News 2016 12 18 Retrieved 2020 11 29 Poland Draft Law Threatens Supreme Court Human Rights Watch 2017 07 20 Retrieved 2020 12 13 a b Brzozowski Alexandra 2019 11 05 Poland s 2017 judicial reform broke EU law bloc s top court rules www euractiv com Retrieved 2020 12 13 Joanna Berendt Marc Santora December 17 2018 Poland Reverses Supreme Court Purge Retreating From Conflict With E U The New York Times Retrieved December 18 2018 Court of Justice of the European Union 8 April 2020 Commission v Poland Press Release PDF curia europa eu Davies Christian 2017 05 23 My worst nightmares are coming true last major primeval forest in Europe on brink of collapse The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2021 02 12 Bialowieza destructive logging in Polish Primeval Forest European Data Journalism Network Retrieved 2021 02 12 Scars of the Primeval Forest What Really Happened in the Oldest Forest of Europe infografiki wyborcza pl Retrieved 2021 02 12 EU court orders Poland to stop logging in Bialowieza forest The Guardian Reuters 2017 07 28 Retrieved 2021 02 12 a b European Court of Justice 17 April 2018 The forest management operations concerning the Puszcza Bialowieska Natura 2000 site that have been undertaken by Poland infringe EU law PDF Politico EU Retrieved 2021 02 12 C 441 17 Commission v Poland Bialowieza Forest curia europa eu Retrieved 2021 02 12 Poland faces 100 000 a day fines over illegal logging in Bialowieza forest The Guardian 2017 11 21 Retrieved 2021 02 12 UNESCO urges Poland to stop logging ancient forest www euractiv com 2017 07 06 Retrieved 2021 02 12 Brussels Agence France Presse in 2017 07 31 Poland vows to continue logging in Bialowieza forest despite court ban The Guardian Retrieved 2021 02 12 Poland violated EU laws by logging in Bialowieza forest court rules The Guardian 2018 04 17 Retrieved 2021 02 12 S A Telewizja 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National Catholic Reporter Retrieved August 19 2019 State of the Union Address by President von der Leyen at the European Parliament Plenary European Commission 16 September 2020 Retrieved 2021 01 13 a b Polish Lawmakers OK Disciplining Judges EU Decries Move The New York Times Retrieved 2019 12 21 Jan Strupczewski 20 December 2019 Poland lower house adopts judiciary reform despite EU concerns Reuters Retrieved 2019 12 21 Gallagher Conor Irish judges to condemn Polish government s judicial policy The Irish Times Retrieved Jan 12 2020 Ptak Alicja Jan 9 2020 EU s top judge warns Poland over overhaul of judiciary Reuters Retrieved Jan 12 2020 via www reuters com Mass protests erupt across Poland over plan to punish judges AP NEWS Dec 18 2019 Retrieved Jan 12 2020 Poland could be forced to leave EU by its judicial reforms top court says Euronews 18 December 2019 Retrieved 2019 12 21 Deutsche Welle www dw com 17 December 2019 Poland s judicial reforms put EU membership at risk warns top court DW COM Retrieved Jan 12 2020 Time is fast running out for judicial independence in PiS ruled Poland euronews Dec 17 2019 Retrieved Jan 12 2020 Letter from Jozef Szczurek Zelazko to consultants twitter com 20 March 2020 Archived from the original on 30 March 2020 Retrieved 30 March 2020 Ministerstwo Zdrowia chce kontrolowac wypowiedzi wojewodzkich konsultantow medycznych The Minister of Health wants to control voivodeship medical consultants freedom of speech Gazeta Wyborcza in Polish 2020 03 26 Archived from the original on 2020 03 27 Retrieved 2020 03 27 Mielcarek Mariusz 2020 03 26 Pielegniarki polozna napisala jak jest w szpitalu Zostala zwolniona Nurses a midwife wrote about the situation in a hospital She was fired Portal Pielegniarek i Poloznych in Polish Archived from the original on 2020 03 27 Retrieved 2020 03 27 Poland celebrates record voter turnout since 1989 elections TVN24 Retrieved 18 October 2019 Wybory do Sejmu i Senatu Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej 2019 r sejmsenat2019 pkw gov pl in Polish Retrieved 2020 12 13 Day Matthew 2019 10 15 Biased state broadcaster left Polish voters with limited choice in election report says The Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 2020 12 13 Polish presidential election managed well despite legal uncertainties but intolerance and public media bias tarnished campaign international observers say osce org Retrieved 2020 12 13 Metcalfe Percy 12 August 2020 No apologies no shame the rise of Poland s guerrilla LGBT activists Notes From Poland Archived from the original on 5 September 2020 Retrieved 18 August 2020 a b Polish Stonewall Protesters decry government s anti LGBTQ attitudes NBC News Associated Press 10 August 2020 Archived from the original on 14 August 2020 Retrieved 18 August 2020 W calym kraju demonstracje solidarnosci z osobami LGBT i Margot Onet Wiadomosci in Polish 8 August 2020 Archived from the original on 17 August 2020 Retrieved 19 August 2020 Sokolowski AP Monika Scislowska and Czarek Desecration trial opens over LGBT rainbow put on Polish icon Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Archived from the original on 2021 01 14 Retrieved 2021 01 13 Poland The Constitutional Court Repeals Eugenic Abortion ECLJ 2020 10 23 W calej Polsce protesty przeciwko zaostrzeniu aborcji Trwa Marsz na Warszawe doszlo do starc RELACJA NA ZYWO Onet Wiadomosci in Polish 30 October 2020 Retrieved 30 October 2020 Poland enforces controversial near total abortion ban BBC News 2021 01 28 Retrieved 2021 02 02 a b Polish police arrest MPs as Tusk vs Duda rule of law battle heats up POLITICO 2024 01 09 Retrieved 2024 01 16 https www sejm gov pl media10 nsf files MPRA D34PW9 24File Uchwa C5 82a 20w 20sprawie 20usuni C4 99cia 20skutk C3 B3w 20kryzysu 20konstytucyjnego 20lat 202015 2023 20w 20kontek C5 9Bcie 20dzia C5 82alno C5 9Bci 20Trybuna C5 82u 20Konstytucyjnego pdf 2021 Rule of Law Report Country Chapter on the rule of law situation in Poland European Commission 20 July 2021 Retrieved 23 December 2021 Areas of EU action European Commission Retrieved 23 December 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Polish constitutional crisis amp oldid 1220289064, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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