Times of Oman

How Poland could return to the European Union fold

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WARSAW: Poland’s ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party has finally taken steps to comply with a European Court of Justice (ECJ) decree ordering it to reverse some of the judicial “reforms” that took effect in July.

Under the offending legislatio­n, the PiS had tried to force out disfavoure­d Supreme Court justices by arbitraril­y lowering the retirement age. It also created two new judicial chambers: one to discipline judges who step out of line, the other to review rulings handed down over the last 20 years and to decide on the validity of the elections.

By offering to reverse the retirement-age provision, Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki is betting that he can reinstate the ousted judges – most of whom had refused to leave anyway – while maintainin­g the rest of the “reform” package.

So far, European Commission First Vice-President Frans Timmermans has opposed this halfway solution, whereas President Jean-Claude Juncker is reportedly willing to entertain it.

But while appeasing the PiS has certainly been the favoured approach of Manfred Weber, the European People’s Party (EPP) Spitzenkan­didat who hopes to succeed Juncker, it is becoming increasing­ly hard to justify. After all, there is good reason to think that populists will suffer an overwhelmi­ng defeat in the European Parliament election in May 2019.

In Poland’s local elections in October, the PiS lost in virtually every municipali­ty, including those where it once enjoyed strong support. Centrist voters clearly have had enough of the ruling party’s radicalism.

But, more than that, many are starting to fear that PiS leader Jarosław Kaczyński may be steering Poland toward an exit from the European Union. How else should one interpret Minister of Justice Zbigniew Ziobro’s recent statements questionin­g the constituti­onal validity of EU agreements?

The PiS’s prospects are declining precisely because it has tried to frame the European Parliament election as a plebiscite on Poland’s EU membership. With support for the EU within Poland exceeding 80 per cent – the highest in Europe – this does not appear to have been a very wise electoral strategy.

Urban voters

Moreover, the urban voters who turned against the PiS in the recent local elections tend to be overrepres­ented in European elections. By trying to repair relations with the European Commission, the PiS is probably hoping that it can win back some of these voters. But even if it succeeds, it will still have to navigate a less favourable EU-wide political landscape. When the United Kingdom leaves the EU on March 29, 2019, the PiS will lose its main ally in the European Parliament. Without the British Tories by its side, the PiS may find itself all but alone.

To be sure, Kaczyński would still have an ally in Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. Yet Orbán has had to see to his own interests as he fights off motions to expel his party from the EPP. As the European Parliament’s main center-right party bloc, the EPP also counts among its members Juncker and European Council President Donald Tusk.

Prior to assuming his current role, Tusk was Poland’s prime minister in the center-right Civic Platform government that preceded PiS rule. As the PiS’s primary nemesis both in Poland and in Brussels, Tusk is a key motivating factor in the party’s efforts to secure a spot in the European Parliament’s next majority.

The PiS is counting on the fact that some EPP members – particular­ly Christian Democratic politician­s – cannot simply ignore its overtures. The PiS could command as many as 20 of Poland’s 52 seats, affording it a potentiall­y decisive role in the vote for the next Commission president.

The EU’s parliament­ary election is coming at time when the European centre right is in retreat. It has lost ground to the Greens in Germany, to President Emmanuel Macron’s La République En Marche! in France, to the League in Italy, and to both leftand right-wing forces in Spain, where the People’s Party has been weakened by corruption scandals.

Against this backdrop, Poland is the odd man out. Its traditiona­l center-right parties – Civic Platform and the Polish People’s Party – could fare well in May, and thus may play a crucial role in coalition building and future leadership votes.

 ?? - File photo ?? PROTEST: People gather near the Supreme Court building during candleligh­t protest against judicial reforms, in Warsaw, Poland.
- File photo PROTEST: People gather near the Supreme Court building during candleligh­t protest against judicial reforms, in Warsaw, Poland.

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