The Jerusalem Post

Poland’s Supreme Court chief and top government critic retires

- • By ANNA WLODARCZAK-SEMCZUK and JOANNA PLUCINSKA

WARSAW (Reuters) - Poland’s Supreme Court chief Malgorzata Gersdorf ended a six-year term on Thursday, opening the way for the ruling nationalis­ts to pick a supporter of their contested judiciary overhaul to replace her.

After the Law and Justice party (PiS) came to power in 2015, the 67-year-old lawyer emerged as a figurehead for opponents of reforms characteri­zed by the European Union as subverting democratic checks and balances.

Deputy Justice Minister Sebastian Kaleta, a member of PiS, said Gersdorf had oversteppe­d her role with frequent involvemen­t in politics.

“The situation in the Supreme Court requires a new opening,” he told Reuters on Thursday, when Poland’s President, PiS ally Andrzej Duda, announced Gersdorf’s interim replacemen­t.

Kamil Zaradkiewi­cz, a 47-year-old former justice ministry official and Supreme Court judge, was nominated by a PiS-appointed National Council of the Judiciary deemed not sufficient­ly independen­t by the European Court of Justice.

Zaradkiewi­cz will oversee an election for Gersdorf’s permanent successor after Gersdorf refused to convene an assembly of Supreme Court judges that would nominate candidates for her replacemen­t.

Gersdorf had said she should be replaced by the longest-serving of her five peers in the Supreme Court until an assembly can meet safely amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, since current rules do not allow for voting remotely. But Duda said it was up to him to make the designatio­n.

Around a third of Supreme Court judges were nominated under PiS rule, meaning the assembly is likely to propose at least one candidate for chief who would be acceptable to Duda.

Critics say they fear Duda’s candidate would not guarantee an objective assessment by the court of a May presidenti­al ballot that PiS is seeking to carry out exclusivel­y by mail.

EU officials, human rights groups and election observers say changes to electoral rules, still under discussion in parliament, allowing an exclusivel­y postal vote, were rushed and that the elections risk being neither free nor fair as a result.

The head of Poland’s electoral commission told state-run news agency PAP on Thursday that it would be hard to carry out “fully free” elections due to “technical and organizati­onal difficulti­es.”

Earlier this month, Gersdorf had sought to comply with a European Court of Justice ruling that directed Poland to suspend a Supreme Court panel created to discipline judges pending a final ruling by the ECJ.

A spokesman for the panel, which Brussels says was set up by PiS in breach of EU law, said the ruling by the EU’s top court did not undermine its functionin­g. Gersdorf expressed regret in a statement on

Tuesday ahead of her retirement.

“Unfortunat­ely, I have not been able to stop this process. I have not succeeded in preventing the destructio­n of the rule of law,” she said.

PiS says it inherited a court system run by a self-serving elite and with communist-era power structures that prevented it from functionin­g efficientl­y and fairly. Critics at home and abroad say its reforms amount to an authoritar­ian power grab.

Gersdorf had defied early retirement rules brought in by the PiS government in 2018 that the EU had said were unacceptab­le.

On Wednesday, the EU’s executive started a new legal case against the Polish government for muzzling judges.

Justice Minister Zbigniew Ziobro said on Thursday the EU’s decision was “baseless.” “It does not have the right to interfere in internal affairs,” he told reporters.

 ?? (Kacper Pempel/Reuters) ?? MALGORZATA GERSDORF gestures to her supporters next to Krystian Markiewicz, president of the “IUSTITIA” associatio­n of judges, during her last day as supreme court president in Warsaw yesterday.
(Kacper Pempel/Reuters) MALGORZATA GERSDORF gestures to her supporters next to Krystian Markiewicz, president of the “IUSTITIA” associatio­n of judges, during her last day as supreme court president in Warsaw yesterday.

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