A motion to put Adam Glapiński before the State Tribunal has been prepared and is ready. It will be filed in the coming days, Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk said on Tuesday (March 19). Glapiński is the chief of Poland's central bank. He has been appointed to this role by the previous government, led by the Law and Justice party.
Lawmakers from Poland's ruling coalition are planning to submit a preliminary motion to put central bank chief Adam Glapiński before the State Tribunal.
Prime Minister Donald Tusk told a press conference on Tuesday that said motion has been prepared. "It will be filed in the coming days," he added.
The motion would be dealt with by the constitutional responsibility committee in the parliament and Glapiński could be summoned for hearings.
Last week, Polish opposition party Law and Justice (PiS) asked the top constitutional court to declare laws allowing a parliamentary committee to summon the central bank chief for hearings unconstitutional.
Glapiński, whose ties to the leader of Law and Justice, the former ruling party, go back decades, has been accused by the government of Prime Minister Donald Tusk of not being sufficiently independent.
A motion to the Constitutional Tribunal concerning a procedure at the committee was submitted on March 6, Krzysztof Szczucki, a PiS lawmaker who sits on the committee, told Reuters on March 14.
"The central bank governor does not respond to the parliament, so the initial proceedings should not be held before the constitutional responsibility committee, it should be a body that would not infringe his independence," Szczucki said.
"The goal is for the process to follow the rules, but we expect it will attempt to harass the central bank governor."
The new pro-European Union government led by Tusk has vowed to ensure that those it accuses of wrongdoing during the rule of the previous nationalist administration will be brought to account, and it has launched sweeping changes in state media and the judicial system.
Źródło: TVN24 News in English, Reuters, PAP