EuroNews (English)

Poland ends long wait and gets first payment of EU recovery funds: €6.3 billion

- Jorge Liboreiro

The payment, con rmed on Monday, ends a long wait for the country, whose national plan was approved in June 2022 but remained blocked over persistent concerns about a lack of judicial independen­ce and democratic backslidin­g.

The decline was credited to Law and Justice (PiS), the hardright party that governed Poland for eight consecutiv­e years and spearheade­d far-reaching reforms that expanded political control over the judiciary and packed courts with loyalists.

The most controvers­ial reform empowered the disciplina­ry chamber of the Supreme Court to punish magistrate­s according to the content of their verdicts. The changes prompted a protracted stando between Brussels and Warsaw, concluding in a landmark ruling from the European

Court of Justice (ECJ) that struck down the overhaul.

But the country's share of the recovery fund, a total of €34.5 billion in low-interest loans and €25.3 billion in non-repayable grants, stood frozen until Donald Tusk took over as Prime Minister and began tabling legislatio­n to undo the PiS-era legacy.

The European Commission of cially unblocked the money in late February, days after Tusk's government presented a nine-bill "action plan" to restore judicial independen­ce and adopted a ministeria­l order to discontinu­e unjusti ed proceeding­s against judges.

The new cabinet also committed to abide by the ECJ ruling and respect the primacy of EU law, which PiS had contested, exacerbati­ng the row.

The Commission considered Warsaw's overtures su cient to meet the two overarchin­g conditions, or "super milestones," related to the judiciary and allow Poland to gradually receive payments under the bloc's €750-billion common pot.

The move paved the way for the disburseme­nt of €6.3 billion, made up of €3.6 billion in loans and €2.7 billion in grants, which are earmarked for diversifyi­ng energy supplies, combatting air pollution and modernisin­g agricultur­al production, among other things.

Until now, Poland had only received €5.1 billion in "pre- nancing" but this was done without strings attached and was the same for every member state.

"An important day for Poland," European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said on Monday. "This is just the beginning."

"Good cooperatio­n brings results," said Tusk.

Katarzyna Pełczyńska, Poland's minister for regional policy, described the sum as the "largest transfer from the EU in the history of our membership."

Warsaw is expected to submit two more requests this year to receive an additional €23 billion. All payouts will be subject to the completion of investment­s and projects and could be paused if Tusk's judicial plans su er a setback.

The nine bills under the "action plan" will require the signature of President Andrzej Duda, who is politicall­y aligned with the PiS party and has used his veto power in the past to block legislatio­n that, in his view, infringed upon his presidenti­al prerogativ­e.

Since leaving o ce, PiS o - cials have accused the Commission of playing politics and withholdin­g the money to e ect a change in government.

 ?? ?? Prime Minister Donald Tusk has vowed to unlock the entire amount of recovery funds allocated to Poland.
Prime Minister Donald Tusk has vowed to unlock the entire amount of recovery funds allocated to Poland.

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