Draft
report says country’s radical changes to its highest court threaten democratic
norms.
WARSAW
— Changes to Poland’s constitutional court pushed through by its new
conservative government “endanger not only the rule of law, but also the
functioning of the democratic system,” according to a draft report from a European legal advisory body.
The Venice Commission, part of the Council of Europe, was invited to examine the state of the
Constitutional Tribunal by Poland’s foreign minister in December after a constitutional crisis was set
off by disputes over which judges should sit on the Tribunal and the Law and
Justice party government’s subsequent legal changes to the court’s
functioning. The situation is also being examined by the EU,
which in January launched an unprecedented “rule of law” probe into
the Polish government’s actions.
Poland’s government
has insisted that its changes are well within European constitutional norms,
and that they have simply served to make the court reflect a fairer balance
between the government and the opposition and that the changes to its
operations make it more effective.
However,
the Venice Commission’s draft report found little or no merit in any of the
government’s steps.
“As
long as the situation of constitutional crisis related to the Constitutional
Tribunal remains unsettled and as long as the Constitutional Tribunal cannot
carry out its work in an efficient manner, not only is the rule of law in
danger, but so is democracy and human rights,” said the draft.
The
first crisis related to the composition of the court. The former Civic Platform
government, in power since 2007, named five new judges to the 15-member court
just before parliamentary elections on October 25. But two of those
nominations were questionable, as they replaced judges whose terms expired only
in December. However, the government acted with opinion polls
showing Civic Platform very likely to lose the elections to Law and
Justice.
The
new parliament, in which Law and Justice has an absolute majority, scrapped the
election of all five judges, and elected five of its own, all of whom were
rapidly sworn in by President Andrzej Duda.
The
Tribunal later found that Civic Platform’s gambit was unconstitutional and that
the two questionable judges were improperly chosen, but that the election
of the first three judges was valid. However, the government has ignored that
verdict.
The
government then adopted deep structural changes to the way the court works. The
new law insists that the Tribunal take cases sequentially, sets a quorum of 13
out of 15 judges, and says that constitutional verdicts have to be decided by a
two-thirds majority.
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