The EU said yesterday it was launching legal action against Poland for ignoring European Union law and undermining judicial independence, prompting a sharp rebuke from Warsaw.
Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said the EU’s decision reflected a trend towards “bureaucratic centralism” in Brussels that “has to be stopped”.
The step escalates a long-running feud between Warsaw and Brussels over Poland’s perceived backsliding on EU democratic norms.
Brussels is already withholding approval of coronavirus recovery funds for Poland over the row. EU economy commissioner Paolo Gentiloni said the infringement proceedings targeted Poland for breaching the primacy of EU law and for deciding that certain articles of EU treaties were incompatible with Polish laws.
Poland’s Deputy Justice Minister Sebastian Kaleta hit back by calling the EU announcement “an attack on the Polish constitution and our sovereignty”.
Former prime minisiter Beata Szydlo, an MEP for Poland’s ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party, said: “This is no longer a legal dispute, it is an attack on the Polish constitution and the foundations of Polish statehood”.
Morawiecki said he “deeply” disagreed with the European Commission’s move, adding that it showed a lack of understanding of the distinction between EU and national competences. Morawiecki said the legal action showed that “a trend for... bureaucratic centralism is unfortunately progressing in Brussels but it has to be stopped”.
“More and more EU member states are seeing that there should be a limit to competences — what the European Union can decide on and what the Polish state can decide on,” he said.
Legal action from Brussels was expected given persistent defiance from Poland’s Constitutional Court to the European Court of Justice (ECJ).
The ECJ has already ruled against Poland for implementing a mechanism to lift the immunity of judges in the Constitutional Court and to sack any not deemed acceptable by the parliament dominated by the Law and Justice party.
The European Commission is also upset over a 2019 Polish law that prevents Polish courts applying EU law in certain areas, and from referring legal questions to the ECJ.
Gentiloni told a press conference the Polish moves “breached the general principles of autonomy, primacy, effectiveness and uniform application of Union law and the binding rulings of the Court of Justice”.
The European Commission, he said, considers the Polish Constitutional Court “no longer meets the requirements of an independent and impartial tribunal established by law, as required” by a fundamental EU treaty.
He said Poland had two months to respond to a formal letter setting out the grounds of the infringement procedure.
In the event of no satisfactory reply, the matter could be sent to the ECJ. While there is no option to kick Poland out of the EU for not respecting the bloc’s laws, it could be hit with daily fines for non-compliance.
But Poland and Hungary — another eastern EU member accused of undermining democratic norms — have a pact mutually shielding each other from more extreme EU punishment, such as removing their voting rights in the bloc.