Poland has paid a bitter price for making concessions to the European Union on its judicial reforms, Jaroslaw Kaczyński, head of the ruling conservatives and the country's paramount leader, said on Tuesday.
Last week, Poland's government, run by the Law and Justice (PiS) party, told Brussels it was willing to make some changes to the reforms that the European Commissions had said subverted the rule of law. "The price is significant, it's bitter," Kaczyński told the conservative news site wPolityce.pl. "I'm not going to hide that we model ourselves on the (Hungarian) Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who has often had to make unpleasant concessions." Kaczynski added that he would have preferred to go ahead with the reforms, but internal and external "circumstances" have forced the changes. Under the changes, the justice minister now would have seek the opinion of judges before deciding whether to dismiss a court president. PiS was also willing to equalise the compulsory retirement age of female and male judges at 65 years. Under the original judicial overhaul, the justice minister was granted discretionary powers to replace court presidents without seeking any secondary opinion, without providing any justification and with no review. The initial judicial overhaul also set the compulsory retirement age at 60 years for female judges and 65 for male judges, meaning almost 40 percent of Supreme Court judges would be forced into retirement
Źródło: Reuters
Źródło zdjęcia głównego: tvn24