Chattanooga Times Free Press

Polish leaders want to study Russian clout

- BY VANESSA GERA

WARSAW, Poland — The Polish ruling party is pushing for the creation of a commission which it says would investigat­e Russian influence in Poland. Critics view it as an attempt to create a powerful and unconstitu­tional tool that would help the party continue to wield power even if it loses elections this fall.

Some fear the rightwing ruling party could use the planned commission to eliminate opposition leader Donald Tusk from political life. Tusk is the greatest threat to the ruling party, Law and Justice, as it seeks a third consecutiv­e term in the vote expected in October.

Opposition senators dubbed it “Lex Tusk,” using the Latin term for “law,” and rejected it earlier this month in the upper house, where they hold a majority.

It now returns to the more powerful lower house of parliament, the Sejm, where the ruling party can usually muster a slim majority. A vote is expected on Friday.

However, in an unexpected developmen­t, a parliament­ary commission making recommenda­tions for that ballot voted Wednesday to uphold the Senate’s rejection. It was a show of unity by the opposition but lawmakers are under no obligation to reject the bill.

The bill foresees the creation of a state commission with the powers of prosecutor and judge. It could impose punishment­s, including 10-year bans on officials from positions that have control over spending public funds.

Critics say it violates the democratic separation of powers by giving the proposed commission the powers of a court. Poland’s ombudsman has said some of its provisions violate the constituti­on.

The proposal comes amid the backdrop of Russian aggression in Ukraine, Poland’s eastern neighbor, and with both sides of the political spectrum accusing the other of allowing the Kremlin to exert influence in Poland, particular­ly through the energy sector.

It is a sensitive issue in a country that was under the control of the Soviet Union for the Cold War decades, but threw off communism in 1989.

The bill would create a “State Commission for the Study of Russian Influences on the Internal Security of the Republic of Poland in the Years 2007-2022” which would continue even if there is a change of power in the fall.

That time period covers government­s led by Tusk’s centrist Civic Platform party, from 2007-2015, and the current ruling party, Law and Justice, since 2015.

Law and Justice accuses Tusk of having been too friendly toward Russia during his years as prime minister and making gas deals favorable to Russia — before he went to Brussels to be the president of the European Council.

Critics of Poland’s current government accuse it of acting in ways that help Russia, for instance by increasing coal imports from Russia before the full-scale war in Ukraine and bickering with Germany and other Western allies, leaving the West more fractured as it faces Russian aggression in the region.

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