The Scotsman

Polish president uses veto to scrap bills that provoked civil unrest

- By MONIKA SCISLOWSKA

Poland’s president has announcedh­ewillvetot­wo contentiou­s bills which sparked days of nationwide protests and were widely seen as assaults on the independen­ce of the judicial system.

The decision marks the first time Andrzej Duda has broken openly with Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the powerful leader of the ruling Law and Justice party.

Mr Duda was handpicked by Mr Kaczynski as the party’s presidenti­al candidate in 2015 and has loyally supported the party’s conservati­ve, nationalis­t agenda until now.

Mr Duda appeared to take party leaders by surprise with a move that, at least for now, halts the party’s attempts to consolidat­e its power. The party’s moves over the past two years, including a successful neutralisi­ng of the constituti­onal court, have raised concerns about rule of law in a country long considered a model of democratic transition.

Mateusz Morawiecki, the deputy prime minister and one of the most prominent figures in the party and government, said he was “surprised and disillusio­ned”.

Lech Walesa – the Nobel Peace Prize laureate, democracy leader and former president – praised Mr Duda’s step, calling it “a difficult and a courageous decision”.

Crowds outside the presidenti­al palace chanted “We thank you!” and chanted the names of Polish towns where protests had erupted repeatedly over more than a week.

Mr Duda said he would veto the two most controvers­ial bills out of three recently passed aimed at overhaulin­g the judicial system.

One would have put the Supreme Court under the political control of the ruling party, giving the justice minister, who is also prosecutor general, power to appoint judges.

Mr Duda said the country’s justice system as it works now needs reform, but he said the planned overhaul threatened to create an oppressive system and that the protests of recent days show that the changes would divide society.

He said that there is no tradition in Poland for a prosecutor general to have such large powers and he would not agree to that now.

He said that he consulted many experts before making his decision, including lawyers, sociologis­ts, politician­s and even philosophe­rs. He did not mention having consulted with either Mr Kaczynski or prime minister Beata Szydlo, in what might be another sign of a rift with party leaders.

He also noted that he had not been consulted by the ruling party on the legislatio­n, a break with procedure.

He said the person who influenced him most was Zofia Romaszewsk­a, a leading anticommun­ist dissident in the 1970s and 1980s.

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