Member state's lawlessness and European law – the case of Poland

Authors

  • Robert Mezyk

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.30722/anzjes.vol12.iss1.15078

Keywords:

European Law, Rule of law, Poland, European Court of Justice, the Polish Constitutional Tribunal, the infringement procedure

Abstract

Since 2015 the Polish authorities have undertaken numerous actions subordinating the country's judiciary to political influence. These steps met resistance from the European Union (EU), including proceedings by the European Commission and at the Court of Justice of the European Union (ECJ). The judgement of the ECJ in the case A.K. and Others v Sąd Najwyższy (2019) brought the situation to another level by empowering national courts to verify the independence of other domestic judicial bodies. While the ECJ empowered Polish judges to reject the domestic court-packing, the Polish state countered this with internal disciplinary sanctions. I discuss this tension and consider the upcoming conflict between the ECJ and the Polish Constitutional Tribunal (‘CT’). I conclude by highlighting the fact that whereas Poland breaches European law, the breach will be hard to rectify due to the lack of independent enforcement mechanisms on the side of the EU.

Downloads

Published

2021-02-05

Issue

Section

Articles