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Poland’s top court strikes down ‘unconstitutional’ reforms

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Poland's Constitutional Court on Wednesday struck down a set of government reforms concerning its judges that have paralysed the EU member state's top court, sparking a constitutional crisis.

The populist Law and Justice (PiS) government, which has drawn criticism at home and abroad over several controversial laws since coming to power in October, said in advance it would not recognise the ruling.

The move appears to have set it on a collision course with the European Union, which launched an unprecedented probe in January into the reforms that could trigger punitive measures.

Chief Justice Andrzej Rzeplinski said the court found that many sections of the law passed in December 2015 were "non-compliant with the Polish Constitution".

Supporters of the Committee for the Defense of Democracy movement stage a protest in front of the Po...
Supporters of the Committee for the Defense of Democracy movement stage a protest in front of the Polish Constitutional Court in Warsaw, Poland, on March 8, 2016
Janek Skarzynski, AFP/File

The law "prevents the honest and proper functioning of the ... Constitutional Court, by interfering in its independence and separation from other powers, thus violating the principles of the rule of law," Rzeplinski said.

The new law also raised the bar for Constitutional Court rulings from a simple majority to a two-thirds majority, while requiring 13 judges to be present for the most contentious cases instead of nine previously, among other changes.

Legal and opposition figures have slammed the law for paralysing the court and removing important checks on the government's power.

It has also triggered mass street protests by tens of thousands of Poles worried about democracy in the ex-communist EU and NATO member of 38 million people, also an economic and political heavyweight in central Europe.

- 'Checks and balances' -

In a leaked draft report, European legal experts from the Council of Europe rights watchdog warned that the government reforms undermine democracy, human rights and the rule of law in Poland.

The commission is due to publish its official report by Saturday. Although it findings are not binding, the European Union is likely to review them as part of its own rule of law probe.

Andrzej Rzeplinski  head of Poland's Constitutional Court  attends a session at the Constitutio...
Andrzej Rzeplinski, head of Poland's Constitutional Court, attends a session at the Constitutional Tribunal in Warsaw, Poland, on March 8, 2016
Janek Skarzynski, AFP

PiS party leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski, seen as Poland's real decision-maker despite holding no formal government post, has dubbed the Council of Europe opinion "legally absurd".

He insisted the reforms to the top court were a "matter of national sovereignty" and that government would not back down.

Prime Minister Beata Szydlo discounted Wednesday's ruling out of hand insisting a day earlier that "the statement that will be delivered by some of the judges of the Constitutional Court will not be a verdict in the legal sense of the term."

Some, however, called the reforms a blow to democracy.

"If the government doesn't abide by the constitutional court's ruling soon, we're dealing the biggest crisis in the history of Republic and a constitutional coup d'etat," Ryszard Petru, leader of the liberal 'Modern' opposition party said Wednesday.

"PiS has fundamentally violated the constitution, its contempt for the separation of powers defacto allows me to say without hesitation that democracy has stopped functioning in Poland," Professor Radoslaw Markowski, a political scientist and member of Poland's Academy of Sciences told AFP Wednesday.

"There is no rule of law; checks and balances on power are gone," he added.

Warsaw University sociologist Maciej Gdula told AFP the ongoing "institutional crisis is the worst since 1989", when Poland shed communism.

"The EU doesn't really have any way to influence it. The only way would be to exclude Poland from the European Council, but that would require unanimous support and Hungary has already said it would object."

Poland’s Constitutional Court on Wednesday struck down a set of government reforms concerning its judges that have paralysed the EU member state’s top court, sparking a constitutional crisis.

The populist Law and Justice (PiS) government, which has drawn criticism at home and abroad over several controversial laws since coming to power in October, said in advance it would not recognise the ruling.

The move appears to have set it on a collision course with the European Union, which launched an unprecedented probe in January into the reforms that could trigger punitive measures.

Chief Justice Andrzej Rzeplinski said the court found that many sections of the law passed in December 2015 were “non-compliant with the Polish Constitution”.

Supporters of the Committee for the Defense of Democracy movement stage a protest in front of the Po...

Supporters of the Committee for the Defense of Democracy movement stage a protest in front of the Polish Constitutional Court in Warsaw, Poland, on March 8, 2016
Janek Skarzynski, AFP/File

The law “prevents the honest and proper functioning of the … Constitutional Court, by interfering in its independence and separation from other powers, thus violating the principles of the rule of law,” Rzeplinski said.

The new law also raised the bar for Constitutional Court rulings from a simple majority to a two-thirds majority, while requiring 13 judges to be present for the most contentious cases instead of nine previously, among other changes.

Legal and opposition figures have slammed the law for paralysing the court and removing important checks on the government’s power.

It has also triggered mass street protests by tens of thousands of Poles worried about democracy in the ex-communist EU and NATO member of 38 million people, also an economic and political heavyweight in central Europe.

– ‘Checks and balances’ –

In a leaked draft report, European legal experts from the Council of Europe rights watchdog warned that the government reforms undermine democracy, human rights and the rule of law in Poland.

The commission is due to publish its official report by Saturday. Although it findings are not binding, the European Union is likely to review them as part of its own rule of law probe.

Andrzej Rzeplinski  head of Poland's Constitutional Court  attends a session at the Constitutio...

Andrzej Rzeplinski, head of Poland's Constitutional Court, attends a session at the Constitutional Tribunal in Warsaw, Poland, on March 8, 2016
Janek Skarzynski, AFP

PiS party leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski, seen as Poland’s real decision-maker despite holding no formal government post, has dubbed the Council of Europe opinion “legally absurd”.

He insisted the reforms to the top court were a “matter of national sovereignty” and that government would not back down.

Prime Minister Beata Szydlo discounted Wednesday’s ruling out of hand insisting a day earlier that “the statement that will be delivered by some of the judges of the Constitutional Court will not be a verdict in the legal sense of the term.”

Some, however, called the reforms a blow to democracy.

“If the government doesn’t abide by the constitutional court’s ruling soon, we’re dealing the biggest crisis in the history of Republic and a constitutional coup d’etat,” Ryszard Petru, leader of the liberal ‘Modern’ opposition party said Wednesday.

“PiS has fundamentally violated the constitution, its contempt for the separation of powers defacto allows me to say without hesitation that democracy has stopped functioning in Poland,” Professor Radoslaw Markowski, a political scientist and member of Poland’s Academy of Sciences told AFP Wednesday.

“There is no rule of law; checks and balances on power are gone,” he added.

Warsaw University sociologist Maciej Gdula told AFP the ongoing “institutional crisis is the worst since 1989”, when Poland shed communism.

“The EU doesn’t really have any way to influence it. The only way would be to exclude Poland from the European Council, but that would require unanimous support and Hungary has already said it would object.”

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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