Political pressure increased on Poland on Wednesday after the European Commission launched the first step in a procedure that could ultimately lead to its suspension from the EU Council of Ministers.
European Commission first vice president Frans Timmermans
said the commission would carry out a preliminary assessment of
recently-introduced legislation governing Poland’s highest court in
order to assess its compatibility with EU rule-of-law standards.
While the move marks the first step in a process that
could lead to the invocation of Article 7 of the Lisbon Treaty – which
allows the EU to suspend the voting rights of countries deemed to be in
breach of EU democratic standards – the commission is not expected to
invoke the procedure. Nonetheless, the move will increase tensions
between the EU and the new Polish government over controversial new laws
introduced by the governing Law and Justice Party (PiS).
Announcing the decision following a discussion among
the college of 28 commissioners in Brussels, Mr Timmermans said that the
information so far showed that “binding rulings of the constitutional
tribunal are currently not being respected”.
“There are measures that are being taken by the newly
elected Poland legislature that affect its functioning. Today we have
decided that the commission will carry out a preliminary assessment on
this matter under the rule-of-law framework,” he said.
“The purpose of the approach we have launched is to
clarify the facts in an objective way, assess the situation in more
depth, and start a dialogue with Polish authorities without pre-judging
any possible next steps.”
International criticism
Poland, which elected its first single-party government since 1989 following the election victory of the PiS party in October, has received international criticism following its introduction of new legislation which many believe will curtail media and judicial freedom.
A controversial media Bill will give the government
power to directly appoint the heads of public broadcasters, while
changes to the constitutional court are expected to make it more
difficult for judges to strike down new laws.
While there have been protests against the new
measures in Warsaw, counter-protests in support of the government have
also taken place in recent weeks.
Addressing the Polish parliament on Wednesday, prime minister Beata Szydlo
denied any breach of democratic norms. “Democracy is alive and well in
Poland,” she said, noting that the government was carrying out a
programme supported by Poles who had brought the party to power in the
October general election.
Amnesty International welcomed the commission’s announcement as “an important step by the EU towards upholding human rights in the region”.
“Amnesty International has repeatedly called for
decisive action from the European Commission to address serious human
rights concerns in the past, particularly in the case of Hungary,
” said Iverna McGowan, head of Amnesty in Brussels. “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.”
The right-wing PiS was elected on a eurosceptic and
socially conservative agenda, winning 235 seats in the 460-seat lower
house of parliament. Led by Jaroslaw Kaczynski,
the twin brother of Poland’s late president Lech, who died in a plane
crash in 2010, the party unseated the Civic Platform party, which had
been in power for eight years.
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