Poland goes from zero to hero in EU thanks to
Ukraine effort
Poland’s government hopes that its aid for Ukraine
will help it in its rule of law dispute with Brussels.
Polish Border Towns Receive Mass Influx Of Ukrainians
Fleeing Russian Armed Invasion
Huge numbers of ordinary Poles have responded with
astonishing generosity to the Ukrainian refugees pouring across their eastern
border |
BY JAN
CIENSKI
March 3,
2022 4:00 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/poland-goes-from-zero-to-hero-in-eu-thanks-to-ukraine-effort/
WARSAW —
Poland has gone straight from being the EU’s bad boy to star pupil thanks to
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
For the
first time in years, Poland is getting some positive press.
Huge
numbers of ordinary Poles have responded with astonishing generosity to the
more than 500,000 Ukrainian refugees pouring across their eastern border —
sending relief aid and opening their homes to thousands of people. As a nation
scarred by centuries of Russian aggression, Poland has also become the main
staging point for sending a flood of anti-tank and anti-aircraft rockets,
rifles, ammunition, weapons, armor and other war supplies to the battling
Ukrainians.
Poland’s
rare moment as the good guy is sparking hopes in Warsaw that the European
Commission will let bygones be bygones and give the country a pass on
accusations it’s violated the bloc’s rule of law principles and will release
billions in delayed EU funds.
“The
[European Commission] should immediately cease any sanctions against Poland,”
said Patryk Jaki, a member of the European Parliament from Poland’s nationalist
United Right ruling coalition.
To a
degree, some of the mood music is changing to Warsaw’s advantage. Polish Prime
Minister Mateusz Morawiecki — who is more used to getting brickbats from EU
officials over his country’s democratic backsliding — can now bask in
unexpected praise from Charles Michel, the European Council president.
“I would
like to commend you, dear Prime Minister Mateusz, your team, and the Polish
people,” Michel said Wednesday when visiting the eastern Polish city of
Rzeszów.
But the odor
of Poland’s seven years of often brutal confrontations with the EU still
lingers.
On
Wednesday, the European Commission issued a communication spelling out rules
where “breaches of the principles of the rule of law in a Member State affect
or seriously risk affecting the sound financial management of the Union
budget.” That’s an instrument aimed at backsliding countries like Poland and
Hungary, tying their performance on rule of law to access EU cash.
The
Commission also hasn’t unlocked €36 billion in grants and loans to Poland under
its pandemic relief program. Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said
they would be unlocked once Poland dismantles its contested disciplinary
chamber for judges — which was ruled illegal by the EU’s top court in July — as
well as “end or reform” a disciplinary regime for judges and begin a process
for reinstating those who have been sacked.
Polish
President Andrzej Duda last month proposed a half-measure that dissolves the
disciplinary chamber, but doesn’t tackle other rule of law headaches. But
getting the bill through parliament is blocked by dissent within the United
Right and the unwillingness of the opposition to vote for Duda’s measure.
All those
scraps, though, now seem pretty small in light of the war happening next door.
Reaching
out
“The war is
changing calculations,” said Jakub Jaraczewski, a research coordinator at
Democracy Reporting International, a nongovernmental organization. “There is a
very strong feeling in Poland that we need to overcome political differences
and stand against the external threat. When we have an external war, we don’t
need an internal one.”
Many saw
the need for unity given the scale of the crisis.
Szymon
Hołownia, leader of the centrist opposition Poland 2050 grouping, called for a
“speedy resolution of the disciplinary chamber issue, a speedy resolution of
rule of law so that the open front against Brussels is finally closed.”
Donald
Tusk, leader of the opposition Civic Platform party and a former prime minister
and European Council president, called for national unity after the invasion
but also demanded “a return of rule of law in Poland.”
“Repairing
the situation around the judiciary in Poland is a necessary condition for
strengthening Poland in relation to our allies both in the EU and in the USA,
and the conflict over this issue weakens us,” he said in an open letter, adding
his party would work with the government to help them get out of the “trap” of
the dispute with Brussels.
But he’s
come under fierce attack from government supporters after his European People’s
Party, the largest grouping in the European Parliament, backed a motion calling
on the Commission to “immediately and retrospectively” apply rule of law conditionality.
“Do you
allow further attacks on Poland while Poland is acting to resist Russian
aggression?” tweeted Beata Szydło, an MEP and a former prime minister from the
Law and Justice party.
Despite the
calls to end the dispute, Duda and the government are dodging and weaving on
throwing in the towel on their long-running effort to bring the courts under
tighter political control.
They are
giving way on other contentious issues. Duda on Wednesday vetoed a
controversial education law aimed at “protecting children from moral
corruption” that would have allowed the highly ideological education minister,
who is a fervent opponent of LGBTQ+ rights, more control over the school
system. “We don’t need more conflicts,” Duda said.
But that’s
not stopping growing concern over Poland’s slide in democratic standards.
A report
issued Wednesday by the V-Dem Institute, a democracy NGO, found that Poland was
one of the world’s top “autocractizing” countries.
“Benin, El
Salvador, Mali, Mauritius, and Poland qualify as top autocratizers in both the
long-term and short-term windows,” it says.
That’s
going to make it even more difficult for the European Commission to forget
Poland’s past transgressions, no matter the scale of its current effort to help
Ukraine.
“The
Commission is under pressure to help Poland, but also not to let Poland off the
hook over rule of law,” said Jaraczewski.
Zosia Wanat contributed reporting.
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