Waterloo Region Record

Poles protest for 8th day

Fighting new government rules that would dismiss Supreme Court judges

- Vanessa Gera

WARSAW, POLAND — Poles protested in cities and towns across Poland for the eighth day Sunday over new rules passed by the ruling party that would drasticall­y limit the independen­ce of the judiciary.

Protesters see moves by the populist governing Law and Justice party as an assault on the country’s democratic system of checks and balances, accusing party leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski of behaving in an authoritar­ian way to cement his power.

People waved flags of the European Union and Poland as they gathered in the evening in front of the presidenti­al palace and the Supreme Court in Warsaw. They called on President Andrzej Duda to veto three contentiou­s bills that would put the Supreme Court and other areas of the judiciary under the party’s control.

People chanted slogans, including “Constituti­on!” and “Freedom, Equality, Democracy!” Protests also took place in Krakow, Wroclaw and other Polish cities, with smaller protests in Paris, Brussels, London and elsewhere in Europe.

The legislatio­n quickly passed both houses of parliament in recent days and now awaits Duda’s signature to take effect.

One element of the law on the Supreme Court would call for the immediate dismissal of all the Supreme Court’s judges, with their replacemen­ts to be chosen by the justice minister, who is also the prosecutor general.

The ruling party says its moves are meant to reform corrupt courts never properly purged of former communists after communism fell in 1989. The party, which won elections in 2015 with about 38 per cent of the vote and has maintained that level of support in polls, says it has a mandate to clean up the country.

But the moves to take control of the courts have alarmed the European Union, with Frans Timmermans, the vice-president of the EU’s executive, warning last week that Brussels is very close to taking steps to strip Poland of its voting rights in the bloc over rule of law violations.

Germany’s Justice Minister Heiko Maas on Sunday welcomed possible EU sanctions, telling the weekly German paper Bild am Sonntag that “the independen­ce of the judiciary is in danger in Poland.”

“Somebody who gives so little respect to the rule of law has to accept that he isolates himself politicall­y,” Maas said.

He added that “the EU cannot stand and watch inactively. Rule of law and democracy are the bedrock of the EU.”

 ?? ALIK KEPLICZ, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Anti-government protesters raise candles and placards reading “constituti­on” as they gather in front of the Supreme Court in Warsaw, Poland, on Sunday.
ALIK KEPLICZ, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Anti-government protesters raise candles and placards reading “constituti­on” as they gather in front of the Supreme Court in Warsaw, Poland, on Sunday.

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