1. Introduction
1. On 4 February 2016, Mr Schennach
and others tabled a motion for a resolution on the functioning of democratic
institutions in Poland. In this motion, the authors expressed their
concern that
“reforms and changes, in
particular with regard to the functioning of the Constitutional
Court, the new broadcasting law or the new police law have given
rise to concerns about the continued commitment of Poland to the
main principles of the Council of Europe, in particular with regard
to the rule of law”.
On
27 May 2016, the Bureau of the Assembly seized the Monitoring Committee
for a report on the functioning of democratic institutions in Poland.
2. Regrettably, due to unforeseen circumstances beyond the control
of the persons concerned, there were frequent changes of rapporteurs
for this report. As a result, the preparation of this report was
much delayed and two requests for extension of the reference
for this report
were made. On 6 March 2019, the Monitoring Committee appointed Ms Azadeh
Rojhan Gustafsson (Sweden, SOC) to replace Mr Yves Cruchten (Luxembourg,
SOC), who had been co-rapporteur since the start of this report
and who had left the Assembly in January 2019. Mr Pieter Omtzigt
(Netherlands, EPP/CD) was appointed to replace Ms Dora Bakoyannis (Greece,
EPP/CD), who resigned as co-rapporteur following her candidacy for
the post of Secretary General of the Council of Europe.
3. In the framework of the preparation of this report, two fact-finding
visits to Warsaw were organised. The first visit took place from
3 to 5 April 2017. An information note outlining the findings of
the rapporteurs was published after this visit. The second visit
took place on 5 and 6 September 2019. Our findings during that mission
are an integral part of this report. In addition to the fact-finding
visits, two exchanges of views were organised by the Monitoring
Committee: one on 29 May 2018 and another on 16 May 2019. These
exchanges took place with the participation of representatives of
the authorities, judiciary and independent state bodies of Poland,
as well as representatives of the international community and civil
society.
4. In April 2019, the Committee Chairperson received a letter
from the Chairperson of the Polish Delegation notifying the committee
that this report would be published and debated in the Assembly
just before the national elections in Poland, which could lead to
the instrumentalisation of this report for domestic party-political interest.
He therefore requested that the report be postponed until after
the elections. This would require the extension of our reference.
As it is the principle of the Monitoring Committee not to present
reports during the election period in a given country, the committee
decided to hold the debate on this report during the January 2020
part-session instead of during the October 2019 part-session. The
committee thus requested an extension of its reference from the
Bureau, which was granted on 12 April 2019. As a result, we also
decided to postpone our fact-finding mission from May 2019 until
September 2019.
5. During the preparation of this report, both us and our predecessors
have benefited from an excellent co-operation with, and contributions
from, a wide range of persons and bodies, including from the Polish government;
the Polish judiciary and independent state bodies; representatives
of the Council of Europe monitoring bodies and several other intergovernmental
organisations; as well as experts and representatives of the civil
society in Poland. The list is too long to mention all persons individually,
but we would like to express our sincere gratitude to all that have
been willing to meet us and otherwise contribute to the preparation
of this report. At the same time, we regret that, despite our repeated
requests, it was not possible on any occasion to meet with the Minister
of Justice and the President of Poland (or even members of the President’s Chancellery).
These two personalities, ex officio, have obtained immense influence
in, and power over, the justice system and judiciary as a result
of the recent reforms. It would therefore have aided our work if
we had had the chance to hear their views and clarifications regarding
some of the issues we discuss later in this report.
6. As we will outline in this report, following their election
into power, the Law and Justice Party led government initiated a
broad set of reforms. However, the most important reform by far,
and the most controversial part of these reforms, concerned the
judiciary and justice system. These will therefore be the main focus
of this report. While we will touch upon some of the other reforms,
providing a complete analysis of all reforms and developments that
were brought to our attention is beyond the scope of this report.
At the same time, it should be emphasised that some of these reforms
potentially raise issues that could be of concern and which could
warrant a specific follow up by the Monitoring Committee and the
Assembly.
2. Background
7. It is fair to state that the
reforms initiated by the current authorities have led to a political
and, as we will argue, also constitutional crisis in Poland. The
political crisis began after the parliamentary elections in 2015. These
elections took place in the context of an increasingly polarised
political climate and the growing dissatisfaction of the Polish
public with the ruling elites in the country. General elections,
both for the Sejm and the Senate, were held on 25 October 2015.
They were won by the Law and Justice Party (also known by its Polish
acronym, PiS) which gained 235 seats out of 460 in the Sejm, the
lower Chamber of Parliament,
thus obtaining
an absolute majority.
This
was the first time since 1991 that one single party has had an absolute majority
in Poland. It is important to note PiS did not obtain a two-thirds
majority which would have allowed it to change the Polish Constitution.
Regrettably the polarisation that characterised the political climate
before the elections continued after the elections and even became
more profound and entrenched, compounded by the profound shift of
power following the elections. As a result, dialogue, let alone
co-operation, between government and opposition parties, is minimal,
if not non-existent and zero-sum political strategies are increasingly
being deployed by the political sides. This it to some extend compensated
by the existence of a broad and vibrant civil society in the country
that actively participates in the debates on political and social developments
in the country. However, as we outline below, this has also resulted
in increased pressure on NGOs, including to control their political
discourse.
8. In the view of the PiS, its overwhelming election victory
gave it a clear popular mandate for profound reform of the political
and social system in the country. At the same time, it felt that,
when it came into power, the state structures and democratic institutions
were still dominated by, and biased in favour of, the previous authorities
which – in its view – aimed to sabotage the implementation of the
reform agenda of the new government. In particular, the incoming
authorities viewed the justice system, and in particular the Constitutional
Court, as a key mechanism through which the previous authorities
could thwart the reform agenda of the new government. Regrettably,
the new authorities were strengthened in their view by an unfortunate
decision of the outgoing parliament that aimed to stack the Constitutional
Court with the supporters of the outgoing authorities. The new ruling
majority therefore set out to what it considered to be the “de-politicisation”
of these institutions, with a view to bring them under the control
of the new authorities. In that context, the first institution in
its crosshairs was the Constitutional Court, which had considerable
legal powers to block or hinder its ambitious reform programme should
it not be in line with constitutional provisions.
9. As mentioned, the election victory of the PiS was, for a large
part, the result of its promise to address the increasing dissatisfaction
of the Polish population with the ruling elites and what were depicted
as their self-serving policies. In the view of the new authorities,
the justice system and the judiciary were key areas of the entrenchment
of the previous ruling elites that undermined its impartiality and
was affecting the effective administration of justice in Poland.
As those criticisms ostensibly guided the reforms initiated by the
PiS led authorities, it will be important to outline, in summary,
the state of the Polish justice system before 2015 and the criticisms
thereof by the current authorities.
10. According to the Polish authorities,
a
key reason for the reform of the judiciary has been the – in their view
– very low level of public trust in the judiciary and its independent
functioning, as well as the systemic problem of excessive length
of legal proceedings, despite the high number of judges and the
high level of public spending on the judiciary in Poland. In addition,
according to the authorities, the Polish justice system is characterised
by a corporative culture resulting from a disbalance of powers that
caused a lack of accountability within the judiciary, as evidenced
from the ineffectiveness of disciplinary proceedings in cases were misconduct
of judges, including corrupt activities, was allegedly found. Lastly,
the Polish authorities mention as one of the grounds for the reform
of the judiciary in Poland, its conviction that the Polish justice
system has been unable to hold judges and prosecutors to account
for illegal actions performed during the communist regime in Poland.
11. We have some questions regarding the data provided to justify
the assumption that public trust in the judiciary was very low pre-2015.
The 2017-2018 Rule of Law index of the World Justice Project (which
is largely based on data from before 2016),
quoted by the Polish authorities
shows that – based on public and expert perceptions – Poland is
ranked number 17 out of the 24 EU, EFTA and Nord America countries
included in the survey (#25 in the global ranking of 113 countries
surveyed) with a score of 0.67 (0 being the worst and 1 being the
best). Similarly, the report quoted from the European Network of
Councils of the Judiciary (ENCJ)
to underscore the problems in the
justice system perceived by the judges themselves, shows that while
the perception of the independence of the judiciary is below average,
public trust in the judiciary is within the (lower range of the)
average of countries surveyed.
A 2017 report of the International
Monetary Fund,
that heavily uses data from Council
of Europe bodies such as GRECO and the European Commission for the
Efficiency of Justice (CEPEJ), shows that the independence of the
judiciary sharply deteriorated between 1995 and 2003. However, since
2003 these figures improved steadily, albeit not to the 1995 levels.
Comparative data for 2015 shows that
Poland scored between the 25 and 75 percentiles for judicial independence
and impartiality of the courts, within the lower range of the European
average.
In addition, in the 2015 Corruption Perception Index
of Transparency International,
Poland ranks #30
out of 167 countries with a score of 62 points.
Therefore,
while the data provided to us by the Polish authorities undeniably
shows that there is clear room for improvement in the Polish justice
system, as well as the public trust in it, and therefore justifies
the objective of the authorities to address these issues, this data
does not seem to indicate that public trust in the judiciary was exceptionally
low by European standards when the current authorities came into
power in 2015.
Moreover, recent polls by the Public
Opinion Research Centre (PBOS) show that in September 2015, 46%
of the respondents considered that the courts were functioning badly.
In March 2019, however, this figure was 45%,
indicating that the trust
in the judiciary has remained the same. Similarly, in September
2015, 27% of the respondents positively assessed the functioning
of the courts. In March 2019, on the other hand, this was the case
for 32%
of
the respondents. From these figures it seems clear that the reforms
have not achieved their stated objective with regard to increasing
the public trust in the judiciary.
12. At the same time, it is undeniable that the Polish justice
system and judiciary has faced, and is facing, systemic problems
and challenges that affect the Rule of Law and that are of concern
to the Council of Europe. A key concern is the length of judicial
proceedings and the lack of an effective remedy, principally resulting
from the fact that domestic courts fail to consider the entirety
of proceedings when evaluating their duration. Another concern is
the disproportionally low amounts of compensation awarded by domestic
courts.
The first judgment
of the European Court of Human Rights (“the Court”) that found a
violation of Article 6§1 of the Convention for excessive length
in proceedings was on 30 October 1998. On 31 December 2014, the
Court had found similar violations in 419 judgments. In 2004, Poland
enacted the “Law on complaint about the breach of right to have
a case examined in judicial proceedings without undue delay”. However,
this law proved to be ineffective: out of the 419 judgments mentioned
above, 280 were given between 2005 and 2011–
after the
law had been enacted. Moreover, in that same period, the Court struck
out an additional 358 cases where a friendly settlement had been
reached after the government unilaterally acknowledged a violation
of Article 6§1 and Article 13. On 7 July 2015, the Court delivered
its judgment in the case of
Rutkowski
v. Poland which had been made a pilot case
covering 591 other applications, claiming a violation of Article
6§1 and Article 13. In addition, at that time, 256 additional prima
facie well-founded cases for the same reasons had been lodged with
the Court. According to the most recent statistics,
650 similar cases
are, at the time of writing, pending before the Court in different
stages of the procedure.
13. In its judgment in the case of
Rutkowski
v. Poland, the Court unanimously held that the “violations
of Articles 6 § 1 and 13 originated in a practice that was incompatible
with the Convention, consisting in the unreasonable length of civil
and criminal proceedings in Poland and in the Polish courts’ non-compliance
with the Court’s case-law on the assessment of the reasonableness
of the length of proceedings and “appropriate and sufficient redress”
for a violation of the right to a hearing within a reasonable time.”
It therefore held that “the respondent State must, through appropriate
legal or other measures, secure the national courts’ compliance
with the relevant principles under Article 6 § 1 and Article 13
of the Convention”.
The general measures
of this case are currently pending execution before the Committee
of Ministers, which has opened an enhanced supervision of this case
on the grounds that it has revealed important structural problems
with the Polish justice system.
14. In this context, it should be noted that other structural
problems in the Polish justice system, as identified by the judgments
of the Court, most notably regarding the excessive use and length
of pre-trail detention, were successfully addressed by extensive
reforms. These include the 2009 reform of the Criminal Procedure
Code, which led to the closure of supervision by the Committee of
Ministers between 2011 and 2016.
15. It is important to note that none of the political forces
or civil society organisations denied that there were shortcomings
in the justice system before 2015. All agreed that reforms were
needed to address these shortcomings. However, it is clear that
such reforms should adhere to accepted European standards and norms.
Additionally, such reforms should aim to improve the independence
of the justice system and the efficient administration of justice
in the country. It is these principles that will guide our evaluation
of the reforms that are outlined in this report. In addition, it
will be impossible to discuss the reforms of the justice system without
looking at the issue of the disciplinary procedures that have been
initiated against judges, as well as what seems to be patterns of
social media campaigns to discredit judges and the judiciary, which
have stirred quite a bit of controversy, both on a national level
and an international level.
16. As we noted above, the authorities mentioned that the bureaucratic,
corporate culture in the Polish administration of justice – which
in their view resulted from a disbalance of powers and which caused
a lack of accountability in the judiciary – was one of the main
motivations behind their reforms. A system of judicial self-governance,
similar to the one currently in place in Poland, is the general
norm in Europe. While we acknowledge that any system of self-governance
has an inherent risk of corporativism and vulnerability to self-interest,
and this definitely seems to have been the case in Poland, the White
paper mostly offers anecdotical information as evidence of a disbalance
of powers and lack of accountability of the judiciary. The detailed assessment
of individual cases is beyond the scope and competence of this report.
We nevertheless wish to highlight that, whilst we welcome as a matter
of principle any measure aimed at improving and strengthening the
system of judicial self-governance, including its transparency and
accountability, such measures should be in line with European standards
and norms in order not to weaken the principle of judicial independence.
17. Lastly, another reason the authorities mention for the recent
reforms is the inability of the Polish justice system to hold judges
and prosecutors to account for illegal actions performed during
the communist regime in Poland. Poland has been at the vanguard
of the democratic transitions in Central and Eastern Europe in the waning
days of the Soviet Union. Its peacefully negotiated transition
from a communist to a democratic regime,
which followed a painful period of martial law, is seen by many
as a model for the democratic transitions that followed in other
Central and Eastern European countries. However, it became clear
during our visit that, for a part of the Polish population, this
negotiated transition meant that there has not been full closure
for the misdeeds that happened in the communist area. This, in turn,
gave them the impression, rightfully or wrongly, that alleged perpetrators
of such misdeeds managed to safeguard their interest and escape
justice. There has been no closure for crimes and excesses during
the communist era in Poland. We are not able to comment on the veracity
of the individual cases that have been mentioned by authorities
and its supporters to underpin their claim. We realise that the
communist period, which by many is seen as a period of de facto
occupation by the Soviet Union that interrupted Poland’s post-war
democratic trajectory, remains a very sensitive and sometimes emotional
issue for many citizens. However, we also realise that trying to
link the shortcomings in the functioning of the justice system with
the bygone communist era has substantially, and in our view unnecessarily,
increased emotions and hardened the political discourse. The increasing
polarisation of the Polish political environment, and increasingly
the Polish society as such, negatively affects Poland’s democratic
consolidation and is therefore of concern in the context of this
report.
18. Secondly, by explicitly stating that one of the objectives
of the judicial reforms is to decommunise the Polish judiciary and
to hold to account “
judges who were directly
and shamefully involved with the communist system,”
the authorities have made it
clear that the judicial reforms are also meant as a
de facto mechanism for lustration.
The reforms should, in our view, therefore fully adhere to the high
standards that a lustration process demands. The Venice Commission
has provided an excellent outline in its 2014 interim opinion on
the lustration law of Ukraine
of the standards and norms that
are applicable to a lustration process. This interim opinion also
deals with the question of a lustration process for former communist
officials a very long time after the democratisation of a country
has started, and its deliberations are therefore of relevance for
the Polish justice reforms in this respect. As mentioned by the
Venice Commission in the above-mentioned opinion, lustration is
one of the tools of transitional justice, aimed at protecting “newly
democratic states from threats posed by those closely associated
with the previous totalitarian regimes and to prevent a return of
such a regime”
Lustration is therefore not, as such, a
violation of human rights, as long as it is necessary in a democratic
society and strictly adheres to European standards concerning the
rule of law and respect for human rights. Among the key criteria
listed by the Venice Commission is the fact that “lustration has
to meet strict limits of time in both the period of its enforcement
and the period to be screened”.
In the case of the Lustration Law
of Ukraine, and referring back to its opinions on the Albanian and
Macedonian Lustration laws, the Venice Commission notes that it
is questionable that a country needs to defend itself against those
that were involved in the communist regime more than two decades
after the fall of that regime, which, according to the Venice Commission,
risked raising actual doubts about the actual goals behind the lustration
process. In our view, these observations are equally applicable
to the Polish situation. Moreover, it should be noted a lustration
process for Supreme Court Judges was implemented after the fall
of the communist regime, as demonstrated by the fact that, currently,
the average age of a Polish judge is approximately 42 years, which means,
on average, they were 12 years old when the Communist regime fell.
Therefore, we cannot consider a need for lustration as a valid argument
or appropriate guideline for any reforms of the justice system in
Poland.
19. The political environment in Poland has remained contentious
and polarised up until the moment of writing of this report. Regrettably,
this polarisation is not only limited to the political environment
but is also affecting many aspects of the Polish society. Despite
the domestic and international criticism of its reforms and policies,
the ruling majority remains popular among the Polish population.
At the same time, the opposition in Poland remains fractious and
seems unable to provide a joint alternative to the current ruling
majority.
20. This was highlighted during the 2019 European elections that
were seen as a dress rehearsal for the parliamentary elections in
Poland on 13 October 2019. Overcoming their divisions, the current
opposition parties united in an electoral coalition for the 2019
European elections. While some of the polls in the run up to the
elections showed the united opposition as being close in popularity
to the ruling coalition, this did not materialise on election day
and the elections were comfortably won by PiS with 45.4% of the
popular vote, against 38.5% for the opposition united in the European
Coalition.
21. In the parliamentary elections on 13 October 2019, the opposition
parties fragmented again in several election blocs. The election
campaign was contentious and highlighted the deep divisions in the
Polish society and continuing polarisation of the political climate.
Regrettably, this was reflected in the campaign discourse which
was dominated by intolerant rhetoric,
with the Ruling
Party campaigning on the premise that LGTBI rights were a threat
to the Polish identity and its values.
The outcome of the
election reflects, and is feared to deepen, these divisions. The
elections were won by PiS with 43.6% of the votes
which will give it 235 seats, and
thus an absolute majority, in the 460 member Sejm. This is an increase
of 4 seats, in comparison to the 2015 elections. The main opposition
party Civic Coalition won 27.4 % of the votes or 134 seats. The
left parties returned to the parliament with the coalition bloc
Lewica that won 12.6% of the vote or 49 seats and the Polish Coalition
– consisting of the Polish Peoples Party, Kukiz'15 and some smaller
parties – won 8.6 % of the votes or 30 seats. A new coalition of
far-right and ultra-nationalist parties called Confederation participated
for the first time in the legislative elections and won 6.8% of
the votes or 11 seats in the Sejm. No other party passed the 5%
threshold to enter parliament. Voter turnout for these elections
was 61.7%. The main opposition parties had come to an election agreement
were, in most of the 100 single mandate constituencies for the Polish Senate,
they would support one single candidate against the ruling party
candidate. Arguably as a result of this strategy, PiS no longer
has as majority in the Senate. It won 48 seats in the Senate, while
the three main opposition parties won an equal number of seats.
Four mandates were won by independent candidates, one of which is
reported to be supportive of the ruling party. As a result, the
majority in the Senate will depend on the other three independent
senators. While the Senate’s powers are more limited than the Sejm,
and while the latter can override decisions of the Senate with an
absolute majority, losing the majority in the Senate would make
it more difficult for PiS to push through legislation than it did
in the last four years. In addition, the Senate is involved in the
nomination of representatives on a number of key institutions and
regulatory bodies, which could complicate PiS’ efforts in achieving
its goal of bringing the Polish institutional framework fully under
its political control.
22. On 21 October 2019, PiS requested a recount of the votes of
the Senate races in six districts where they claimed the results
were very close, but where there had also been, in their view, a
high number of spoilt ballots. A day later, the opposition requested
the recount of the results in another three districts for a variety
of reasons. Given the fact that the ruling party lacks a majority
in the Senate by one vote, the recount requests were widely perceived
as an attempt to change the election results via the courts. These
requests are heard by the newly established Chamber on Extraordinary
Control and Public Affairs of the Supreme Court, which is responsible for
hearing election-related appeals. As we will outline later in this
report, the independence of this institution is open to question
and it is vulnerable to political pressure and interference. As
a result, it does not have the required trust by all stakeholders
as an impartial arbiter in election disputes.
Therefore,
on 24 October 2019 we issued a statement
calling upon
the authorities and the Supreme Court to ensure the utmost transparency and
impartiality in the handling of the appeals. By 13 November 2019,
the Special Chamber of the Supreme Court had dismissed all 6 appeals
by the PiS. Of the appeals filed by the opposition, one had been
dismissed, whilst one was found admissible and well-grounded, but
had not changed the outcome of the elections in that particular
race. At the time of writing, the other appeal was still under consideration.
3. Reform
of the judiciary and justice system
23. In the following sections,
we will outline and analyse the main components of the reform of
the justice system and judiciary, as implemented by the Polish Authorities
since 2015. Under this heading, we will also look at some of the
clearly connected developments, such as the increasing trend in
disciplinary measures against judges, allegedly for having delivered
verdicts contrary to the interest of the authorities, as well as
the crisis for control over the Constitutional Court that was one
of the grounds for the Motion for Resolution that lead to this report.
24. There is one issue we want to make clear from the start with
regard to our analysis of the reforms. On several occasions, we
have heard the argument that, because certain aspects of the reform
would also exist in other countries, that would mean that these
aspects therefore automatically would be in accordance with European
rule of law standards. However, even if certain provisions in the
new legislation would be exactly the same as in some other country,
it should still be analysed in the context of the total corpus of
legislation and the reality of the country concerned. Moreover,
this could easily be seen as a justification for what the President of
the Venice Commission aptly called the” Frankensteinisation of legislation”
where legislation would be based on a combination of “worst practice”
existing in other countries, which, we are fully convinced, has
never been the objective of our intermediaries in Poland.
3.1. Reform
of the Constitutional Court
25. As we mentioned earlier, the
ruling majority’s perception of the Constitutional Court as an impediment to
its reform programme was strengthened by the fact that the previous
ruling majority had changed the law governing the appointment of
Constitutional Court judges. This allowed the previous majority
to fill all five positions that would become available in the Constitutional
Court in 2015, including two that would become available after the
elections had taken place. This was seen by the new authorities
as a clear attempt by the previous administration to stack the Court
with members loyal to it in order to protect its interest after
the elections, as it was clear they would lose their control over
the levers of power. Immediately after the elections, the new ruling
majority set out to rectify what it saw as an unacceptable situation
and to install its own supporters in the Constitutional Court, which
quickly developed into a constitutional crisis that impeded the independent
functioning of this institution.
26. The Polish Constitutional Tribunal is composed of 15 judges,
elected by the Sejm by a simple majority for a non-renewable term
of office of nine years. The term of office of three of its judges
was due to expire on 6 November 2015, and the tenure of another
two was due to expire on 2 and 8 December 2015 respectively. On
25 June 2015, three months before the parliamentary elections, the
Sejm under the previous majority led by the Civic Platform (Sejm
of the 7th convocation), adopted a law on the Constitutional Tribunal
which allowed the outgoing Sejm to appoint the replacements for
all Constitutional Court judges whose mandates expired in 2015.
Subsequently, on 8 October 2015, just before the elections, the
outgoing Sejm elected five new Constitutional Tribunal judges. To
be able to take up their duties, newly elected judges must be sworn
in by the President, in accordance with Article 21 (1) of the Constitutional
Tribunal Law. However, President Duda, who is from the Law and Justice
Party, refused to take the oath of these five newly elected judges.
27. The law of on the Constitutional Tribunal (passed on 25 June
2015) was challenged before the Constitutional Tribunal by a number
of deputies in the Sejm. On 3 December 2015, the Constitutional
Tribunal ruled that Article 137 of the law was unconstitutional
insofar as it enabled the previous Sejm to elect two judges whose
term of office would only expire after the first sitting of the
new Sejm, i.e. in December 2015. The election by the previous Sejm
of the three judges, whose term of office expired on 6 November,
was deemed constitutional. The Tribunal further considered that
Article 21 (1) imposes an obligation upon the President to take
the oath of newly elected judges right away and that any other interpretation
of this provision would be unconstitutional.
28. On 19 November and on 22 December 2015, the Sejm adopted a
series of controversial amendments to the Law of the Constitutional
Tribunal whose cumulative effect was, as also noted by the Venice
Commission in its opinion on these amendments,
to intentionally render the functioning
of the Constitutional Court in its legal, albeit politically disputed,
composition impossible. In addition, on 25 November, the Sejm adopted
a resolution invalidating all five appointments of Constitutional
Court Judges of 8 October 2015 and appointing another five judges
who were sworn in by President Duda the same night at 1.30 a.m.!
29. These two sets of amendments were the subject of an appeal
before the Constitutional Court, which ruled respectively on 9 December
2015 and 9 March 2016 that the amendments of 19 November and 22 December
were, by and large, unconstitutional. It also ruled, on 19 December
2015, that the Sejm could only have made two appointments on 25
November, and not five as three judges had been constitutionally elected
by the previous Sejm.
30. According to Article 190 of the Constitution, the Tribunal’s
judgments are binding and final and should be published immediately
in the official publication in which the original normative act
was promulgated. However, in both cases mentioned in the previous
paragraph, the Prime Minister’s Office refused to publish these
judgments.
We wish to
note that the non-publication of Constitutional Court judgments,
or intentional undue in the delay of their publication, violates
the Polish Constitution and is contrary to international rule of law
standards and norms.
31. On 23 December 2015, the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Poland
requested the opinion of the Venice Commission on the amendments
to the law on the Constitutional Court. In its opinion, adopted
during its plenary in March 2016,
the Venice Commission emphasised
that, inter alia, a democracy that respects the rule of law requires
the judgments of the courts, and especially the Constitutional Court,
to be executed fully by the authorities. The Venice Commission therefore
urged the Polish authorities to respect their international democratic
and rule of law obligations and to publish and respect the decisions
of the Constitutional Court.
32. On 22 July 2016, the Sejm adopted a new law on the Constitutional
Court. On 11 August 2016, the Constitutional Tribunal issued a judgment
in which it declared several provisions of the new law as unconstitutional
and annulled them. This judgment was also not published by the authorities.
On request by the Secretary General of the Council of Europe, the
Venice Commission adopted an opinion on this new “Act on the Constitutional
Tribunal” during its plenary on 14 and 15 October 2016.
33. In its opinion, the Venice Commission welcomed the fact that
some of its recommendations in relation to the December amendments
were addressed. It nevertheless concluded that regrettably several
other important concerns were left unaddressed.
34. The new law lowered the quorum for a full bench from 13 to
11 judges
and abolished the two-thirds qualified
majority for decisions, which together were seen as a serious obstacle
to the efficient functioning of the Constitutional Court. At the
same time, the law still contains provisions allowing three judges
to request that a case be heard in full bench. These provisions
also allow the President of the Court to declare a case particularly
complex, meaning that a case will be heard by a full bench, without
the possibility of the plenum to overrule such request. This is
problematic and in violation of the Polish Constitution.
As noted by the Venice Commission
in its opinion, “
In absence of the possibility
for other judges to reject a transfer request, there is a danger
of politicisation and obstruction to the effective functioning of
the [Constitutional] tribunal”.
35. In a welcome development, the new law removed the much-criticised
provision that the President of Poland or the Minister of Justice
could start disciplinary proceedings against Constitutional Court
judges.
36. On the other hand, according to the law, the Court President
is appointed by the President of Poland from among three candidates
proposed by the General Assembly of Judges, in which each judge
has only one vote. In effect, this means that any grouping of three
judges would be able to present a candidate. This leaves considerable
discretion to the President of Poland with regard to the appointment
process and could allow a Court President, who does not have the
support of the majority of the judges of the court, to be appointed. Moreover,
the law stipulates that the presence of the Prosecutor General is
required in all cases before a full bench. In his or her absence,
the case in question cannot be heard, potentially allowing the Prosecutor
General to block the proceedings before the Court simply by not
showing up at a hearing. It should be noted in this context that,
according to Polish legislation, the Minister of Justice is also
ex officio the Prosecutor General (see below). Given the fact that
complex cases and cases of a priory control
over bills are required by law to be heard by a full bench, this
would theoretically allow the Minister of Justice, in his function
of Prosecutor General, to block the hearing on legislation prepared
by his ministry. The possibility for the Court to hear cases in repeated
absence of the Prosecutor General and/or his substitution by a Deputy
Prosecutor, should be allowed for in the law.
37. The new legislation introduces a series of exceptions to the
rule that cases should be considered in chronological order. In
addition, the law allows the President of the Court to change the
order of cases in exceptional circumstances to safeguard the individual
freedoms of citizens, national security or the constitutional order.
While a welcome improvement over previous legislation, it should
be up to the Court itself to agree on the order of cases. This provision
was the subject of an appeal before the Constitutional Court, which
ruled that it violated the principle of separation of powers and
therefore was unconstitutional.
38. The new law stipulates that the President of the Court “requests”
the publication of the judgments in the official gazette in order
for them to come into force, instead of “ordering” the publication,
as was the case in the previous legislation. This is an important
difference in the context of the refusal by the authorities to publish
the decisions of the Constitutional Court when they were not of
their liking. As mentioned, the possibility for a decision to go
arbitrarily unpublished is in contradiction with the country’s rule
of law obligations. This provision should therefore be changed.
39. On 16 August 2016, the government published 21 judgments of
the Constitutional Court, but most notably not the decisions of
9 March and 11 August 2016. On 5 June 2018, the government published
the last three until then, unpublished judgments of the Court following
an act of Parliament. However, these judgments were not published
as judgments “wyroki”, as required by law, but as findings “rozstrzygnięcia.”
They were further accompanied by a note stating that, in the view
of the authorities, these decisions had been taken illegally and
were therefore not recognised. In our view, the notion that a parliament
could decide on whether or not decisions of the Constitutional Court
will be published and enforced is unacceptable. It is equally abhorrent
and contrary to basic rule of law principles for the authorities
to question the legality of individual court decisions and to arbitrarily
decide whether or not they are going to implement them.
40. It should be noted that many of the provisions in the Law
on the Constitutional Court, that in the view of the Venice Commission
ran counter to European standards, have in fact been annulled by
the Constitutional Court judgment of 11 August 2016. This makes
the non-publication and enforcement the Constitutional Court decisions
all the more deplorable.
41. On 19 December 2016, the term of office of the President of
the Constitutional Court expired. Following a controversial and
legally questionable procedure,
one
of the newly appointed judges, who is seen as loyal to the new authorities,
was appointed President of the Court by the President of Poland
on 21 December 2016.
42. During our visit, it was clear that the constitutional crisis,
as a result of the developments surrounding the Constitutional Court,
has not yet been resolved. This is having a long-lasting effect
on the legal system and respect for the rule of law in Poland. The
Constructional Court seems to have been firmly brought under the control
of the ruling authorities and has been rendered impotent as an impartial
and independent arbiter of constitutionality and rule of law in
Poland. In addition, the selective and arbitrary enforcement of
the Constitutional Court decisions by the authorities violates one
of the main tenets of the principle of rule of law and sets a very
dangerous precedent, for example, for future governments.
43. A key issue arises from the fact that the composition of the
Tribunal has not been resolved. As a result, there are three judges
participating in the work of the Tribunal whose appointment, on
2 December, is, per decision of the Constitutional Court itself,
illegal. This, in turn, raises questions about the legality of any
of the judgments in which these judges have participated, which
undermines the principle of legal certainty in the country. The
extend of this problem, is clear from the application
Xero Flor w Polsce sp. z o.o. v. Poland,
which
was communicated by the Polish authorities on 2 September 2019.
In this application, the applicant alleges that his rights under
Article 6§1 (right to a free trial) were violated because the bench
of five judges of the Constitutional Court that examined his case
was composed in violation of the Constitution,
“in particular, Judge M.M. had been elected
by the Sejm (the lower house of the Parliament), despite that post
having already been filled by another judge elected by the preceding
Sejm”.
We
reserve our conclusions until the Court has issued its judgment
in this case, but the potential effect on the case-load of the Court
is clear, underscoring our argument that the justice reforms in
Poland cannot be considered a domestic affair only but have a direct impact
on the international legal system and human rights protection mechanisms.
44. According to Polish constitutional law, common court judges
can rule on the constitutionality of legislative acts in individual
cases before them. This would, to some extent, allow the continued
verification of the constitutionality of laws and government decisions,
although by normal courts. This increases the importance of the
Supreme Court as the highest court of appeals, including for the
uniformity of law with regard to judgments on the constitutionality
of contested pieces of legislation and government decisions. The government
strongly opposes the possibility of an
in
concreto review of legislative acts by ordinary courts
and, reportedly, the Minister of Justice has threatened judges with
disciplinary proceedings if they try to apply the Constitution directly
in individual cases.
3.2. Reform
of the Public Prosecutor’s Office
45. On 24 December 2015, a group
of individual members of the ruling majority tabled a new draft
law on the Public Prosecutors Office in Poland. As this law was
tabled by individual members, and not by the government as such,
a formal public consultation process on the draft law was not required,
which is rather regrettable given the importance of this law and
the subject-matter it covers. In a rather speedy process, that did
not reflect the importance of its contents, the law was adopted
in final reading by the Sejm on 28 January 2016 and by the Senate
on 30 January 2016. It was signed by the President on 12 February
and came into force on 4 March 2016.
46. After the re-establishment of democracy in Poland in 1989,
the previously
de jure independence
of the Prosecution
Service was abolished and the prosecution service was made accountable
to the executive power and in particular to the Minister of Justice.
Reportedly, this situation led to repeated interference, for ulterior reasons,
by consecutive Ministers of Justice in specific individual criminal
cases, counter to European standards.
In a major and welcome reform
of the prosecution service in 2009, this was changed and the offices
of the Public Prosecutor and Minister of Justice were fully separated.
One of the stated goals of this separation of offices was to exclude
any political influence on, and interference in, the public prosecution service.
This was also underscored by the single 6-year term limit for the
prosecutor general and the legal safeguards to ensure his independence
and protection against “abusive dismissal”.
47. While the subordination of the public prosecutor to the executive
does not per se run counter to European standards, the overall trend
in Europe is to increase the independency of the Prosecutors office
from the executive. The 2009 reform of the Polish Prosecution Service
was therefore highlighted by the Venice Commission as an example
of this trend in its 2010 report on the independence of the justice
system.
We find it therefore difficult to
understand why Poland would move away from this general trend in
Europe, especially when this seems clearly, as we outline below,
to the detriment of the impartiality and independence, both perceived
and real, of the Prosecution service.
48. The new law on the Prosecution office completely reverses
the 2009 amendments and merges the posts of Minister of Justice
and Public Prosecutor into one single person, the Minister of Justice.
The new law was challenged before the Constitutional Court by the
Commissioner for Human Rights (Ombudsperson) of Poland. However,
the legality of the Constitutional Court bench hearing this case
was questioned, as it contained illegally appointed judges and therefore
the Ombudsperson decided to withdraw his application. In light of
the concerns raised about this law, including with regard to the
independence of the judiciary, an issue was also raised in connection
with the newly adopted law on the common courts (see below) and
the possible politicisation of the prosecution service, the Monitoring
Committee, on 27 April 2017, decided to request an opinion on the
Act of the Public Prosecutors Office, as amended. Subsequently,
the Venice Commission adopted its opinion
on this law during its plenary on
8 and 9 December 2017.
49. As mentioned, the most prominent, and controversial, aspect
of the new law on the Prosecution Service is the merger of the functions
of the Minister of Justice and of the Public Prosecutor General.
In the authorities’ view, such a merger reflects Polish legal tradition
and improves the accountability and efficiency of the prosecution
service. The authorities have argued that, in reality, the 2009
amendments only had provided an illusionary independence of the
prosecution service from the executive, which was non-existent in
reality. The new law therefore reflected, in their view, this de
facto situation. The Polish authorities have also argued that similar
systems of subordination of the prosecution exist in other Council
of Europe member states. That latter proposition must however be
rejected. While the subordination of the prosecution service to
the executive is not per se against Europeans standards, and while
this kind of subordination still exists in various forms in some
Council of member states, the Polish system is unique in the fact
that it completely merges the two functions and that the Minister
of Justice becomes de facto and de jure the Public Prosecutor. Moreover,
in those countries were the prosecution service is subordinated
to the executive, effective legal provisions exist that interdict
direct government interference in individual cases. Not only are
such provisions absent in the Polish situation, the new law on the
prosecution service explicitly grants the Minister of Justice new
and elaborate powers allowing him to directly intervene in individual
cases, in contravention of European standards.
50. We would like to refer to the Venice Commission opinion for
a detailed analysis of the law. In this report we wish to discuss
the most serious concerns, as outlined in the Venice commission
opinion. These concerns raise questions regarding the respect for
the principle of rule of law as well as the vulnerability of the prosecution
service to politicisation.
51. Under the new law, the Minister of Justice, a politician,
has become, as Public Prosecutor, the head of the prosecution service
of Poland. Important previously existing safeguards to ensure the
functional independence of the prosecution service and to avoid
its politicisation, such as term limits, strict dismissal procedures
for the Prosecutor General and an interdiction prohibiting the Prosecutor
General from holding public office, have therefore become obsolete,
as the Minister of Justice is a political appointee accountable
to the Prime Minister, Parliament and his party. In addition, the
merger of the functions of Prosecutor General and Minister of Justice
seems to run counter to the Polish Constitution, which states that
the Public Prosecutor shall not exercise the mandate of Deputy.
This seems to be confirmed
by the law on the Prosecution Service itself, which states that
the “
public prosecutor cannot belong
to a political party or participate in any political activity.”
It is clear
that this cannot be compatible with the merger of the post of Prosecutor
General with that of the Minster of Justice, who is also currently
a deputy in the Sejm.
52. The new law gives the Public Prosecutor, and thus the Minster
of Justice, extensive discretionary powers to directly intervene
in individual cases. According to the law, prosecutors are obliged
to enforce guidelines and orders of a hierarchically superior prosecutor.
The latter has the legal right to change
or revoke a decision of a subordinate public prosecutors or indeed
take over the handling of the case directly.
Moreover,
the Public Prosecutor General can request operational and investigative
activities to be undertaken by competent bodies (as long as they
are directly pertinent to the proceedings) and inspect any materials
collected in the course of such activities. These provisions give
the Minster of Justice full access to all prosecutorial case files
in Poland and the power to give individual instructions in relation
to them.
At the same time safeguards to guarantee the
transparency of the functioning of the prosecution service and its
protection against political interference are absent or weak in
the new law.
53. As mentioned by Venice Commission, these extensive powers
in the hands of a Minister of Justice, a politician, “pose a real
risk for abuse”. During our visits, we heard numerous allegations,
some of which credible, that such abuse did indeed happen. Irrespective
of the veracity of these allegations, the mere fact that the prosecution
system is vulnerable to political abuse and that safeguards against
this are lacking in the law, undermines the rule of law in Poland
and is of serious concern. The Prosecutions Service, and indeed
the justice system in general, should not only be independent and
impartial, it should also be perceived as such.
54. In addition, the law confers considerable powers on the Prosecutor
General, and thus the Minister of Justice, in relation to the appointment
and promotion of, and disciplinary actions against (including dismissal), individual
prosecutors.
Prosecutors are appointed by the Public
Prosecutor General upon a motion of the National Public Prosecutor
(the Deputy Prosecutor General who is also a political appointee).
While the Public Prosecutor General may seek the advice of the board
of prosecutors, he is not obliged to follow it. Moreover, he can
appoint directly the candidate suggested by the National Public
Prosecutor, without a public competition, in “
particularly
justified cases”. After the first appointment, no more
competitions are foreseen and promotions are decided upon by the
hierarchy. Regarding disciplinary procedures, the Public Prosecutor General
inter alia has the right to inspect the activities of the disciplinary
courts (which are composed of prosecutors who are subordinate to
the Public Prosecutor General), reprove transgressions found, request explanations
and remedy the effects of transgressions.
55. Combined, these powers give the Public Prosecutor total control
over the careers of the individual prosecutors and over the prosecution
service as such. The fact that the National Public Prosecutor, who
is the Deputy Public Prosecutor General, is in charge of the day-to-day
management of the prosecution service does not alleviate our concerns
in this respect, as the National Public Prosecutor is a political
appointee normally appointed by the same ruling majority to whom
the Minister of Justice belongs. In addition, the law explicitly gives
wide and discretionary powers to the Minister of Justice, as Public
Prosecutor General, to intervene in individual cases.
56. During our visit, we were informed that following the adoption
of the law, 114 Prosecutors have been moved from the general prosecutor’s
office and regional offices to what are widely considered as lower
ranking positions. Among these cases were reportedly prosecutors
that had been working on sensitive cases that involved interest
of members of, or close to, the ruling party. At the same, there
is reportedly an increase in the use of secondments or “delegated
prosecutors”, a process that bypasses any existing appointment and transfer
procedures. At the same time the national office and its regional
offices are reportedly mostly staffed with such secondments, leading
to allegations that these positions are “given” as “rewards”.
57. The concerns about these excessive powers are compounded by
the powers given to the Minister of Justice by the Act on the Organisation
of Ordinary Courts (see below) to dismiss and replace court presidents.
58. The concentration of all these (excessive) powers in the hands
of the Minister of Justice make the system open to abuse, undermine
the independence of the judiciary and run counter to the principle
of the respect for the rule of law. The mere fact that the system
is vulnerable to abuse should be of serious concern to the authorities
and legislators and needs to be urgently addressed in the legislation.
3.3. Reform
of the National Council of the Judiciary
59. A key component of the judicial
reforms initiated by the Polish authorities was the reform of the
National Council of the Judiciary (NCJ), which – according to the
authorities – did not represent the whole of the judiciary, was
prone to judicial corporatism, and mostly acted in its own self-interest.
60. According to the Polish Constitution,
the National Council of
the Judiciary, also known by its Polish abbreviation KRS, is the
autonomous self-governing body of the judiciary established to safeguard
the independence of the judiciary. It is responsible for, inter
alia, selecting the candidates for the first instance and appeals
courts, as well as for the Supreme Court.
In
addition, it has the authority to appeal laws affecting the courts
and judges before the Constitutional Court and can give opinions
on draft laws concerning the judiciary.
61. According to Article 187 of the Polish Constitution, the KRS
is composed of 25 members, 15 of whom should be chosen from amongst
judges. Furthermore, four must be elected by the Sejm from among
its members, two must be selected by the Senate from amongst its
members, whilst one member is to be appointed by the President of
Poland. The Council has three ex-officio members: the First President
of the Supreme Court, the President of the Supreme Administrative
Court and the Minister of Justice.
62. The Constitution does not specify how the 15 judge members
are to be chosen but, until the 2017 reform, it was to be understood
that these members were judges elected by their peers as recommended
by European standards.
63. In February 2017, the government announced its plans to reform
the National Council of the Judiciary. The initial draft amendments
to the law on the National Council of the Judiciary and certain
other acts of Poland proposed that, inter alia, the judge members
would from now on be elected by the Sejm (in addition to its own constitutional
quota). The Council would also be split into two chambers: one for
judicial members and the other for political representatives. As
both chambers would have to agree to a decision to appoint a judge,
this would give the political representatives a de facto veto over
decisions made by the judicial members. In addition, the proposed
amendments specified that the mandates of all judicial members would
be terminated within 90 days of the adoption of the new law.
64. These draft amendments were strongly criticised by domestic
and international actors, who feared that they would politicise
the appointment of judges and erode the independence of the judiciary.
The draft amendments were assessed by the OSCE/ODIHR. In its opinion,
the OSCE/ODIHR noted that as a result of the proposed amendments
the “
legislature rather than the judiciary
would appoint the 15 judge representatives...” to the
KRS, which would give the legislature and the executive “
decisive influence over the selection of judges”.
As a result, in the view of the OSCE/ODIHR, the proposed amendments
“
raise serious concern with regard to
key democratic principles, in particular the separation of powers
and the independence of the judiciary”. It concluded
that “
if adopted the amendments would
undermine the very foundations of a democratic society governed
by the rule of law”. The OSCE/ODIHR recommended therefore
that the amendments should be reconsidered in their entirety and
not be adopted.
Nevertheless, despite
these extensive criticisms, the draft amendments were adopted by
the Parliament in July 2017. However, on 24 July 2017, the act on
the National Council of the Judiciary was vetoed by the President
of the Republic together with the act on the Supreme Court.
65. On 26 September 2017, a new draft act on the National Council
of the Judiciary, as well as a new draft act on the Supreme Court,
was proposed by the President. While the draft proposed by the President
contained some welcome provisions to address some of the criticisms
made, his draft did not fundamentally differ from the draft law
adopted by the Parliament. This draft was therefore also strongly
criticised by domestic and international actors.
In
a positive development, the Presidential proposal abandoned the
division of the National Council of the Judiciary into two chambers
and introduced a 3/5 majority for the election of the judicial members
by the Sejm. However, the fact that the judicial members would be
elected by the Sejm and not by their peers was regrettably maintained.
Following the adoption of Resolution (2017)2188 on “New Threats
to the Rule of law in Council of Europe member states” the President
of the Parliamentary Assembly requested the opinion of the Venice
Commission on the draft Act on amending the Act on the National
Council of the Judiciary and the draft Act on amending the Act on
the Supreme Court as proposed by the President. The opinion would
also cover the Act on the organisation of ordinary courts, as adopted
by the Polish Parliament in July 2017. The Venice Commission adopted
its opinion
on these laws during its plenary
on 8 and 9 December 2017. Nevertheless, the Sejm adopted, unamended,
the two Presidential draft laws on 8 December 2017 and the Senate
on 15 December 2017. The Presidents signed both laws into force
five days later, on 20 December 2017.
66. In its opinion, the Venice Commission emphasised that, according
to European standards, at least half of the members of the National
Councils of the Judiciary should be elected by their peers from
members of the judiciary. Even with the introduction of a 3/5 majority
for the election of the members by the Sejm, the election of judicial
members remains at odds with European standards as “
judicial members are not elected by their peers
but receive their mandates from Parliament”. Taking into
account the fact that the Senate and Sejm combined also elect six
members who are parliamentarians, this means that the National Council
of the Judiciary is “
dominated by political
appointees”,
which could lead to its politicisation.
This is compounded by the fact that the Sejm is not obliged to appoint
members who are proposed by the judiciary itself. According to the
law, candidates for the judicial positions can be nominated by either
a group of 25 judges or 2000 citizens. Each political faction then
freely selects nine candidates from these proposals which will then
be brought to a vote in the Sejm. At none of these steps is there
a requirement for at least a number of these candidates to have
been proposed by the judiciary itself, again counter to European
norms and standards.
67. According to the Polish authorities, the change in the election
method was dictated by the need to address the under-representation
of district court judges on the National Council of the Judiciary.
While this is in itself a valid objective, we agree with the Venice
Commission that there are far better mechanisms to ensure their
representation on the National Council of the Judiciary that would
not run counter to European norms and standards.
68. In addition to changing the appointment procedure for the
judicial members of the National Council of the Judiciary, the law
also provided for the early termination of the mandates of all judicial
members on the Council. Ostensibly this was done to address the
judgment of the Constitutional Court that held, inter alia, that all
members of the National Council of the Judiciary should have the
same term of office. In the view of other interlocutors, the change
of appointment mechanism and early termination of the mandate of
sitting judges combined amounted to a hostile take-over of the council,
with a view to bring it firmly under control of the authorities.
In addition, the combined effect of these two changes weakens the
independence and allows for the politicisation of this important
institution which, in turn, undermines the independence of the judiciary.
69. In this context, it is important to note that the Constitutional
Court had called for all members on the National Council of the
Judiciary to have the same term of office. In the law, this was
interpreted as a joint term of office, implying the same starting
and end dates for the mandates for all members. We are aware that
the correctness of this interpretation is questioned. In addition,
as noted by the Venice Commission, the principle of a joint term
of all members is questionable, as it hinders the continuity and
preservation of institutional memory of the National Council of
the Judiciary.
70. Following the decision of the Court of Justice of the European
Union with regard to the retirement age of Supreme Court Judges,
those judges who were forced on early retirement before the CJEU
decision appealed their forced retirement before the Supreme Court.
However, the Supreme Court questioned whether the newly established
Disciplinary Chamber of the Supreme Court could be considered independent.
It noted that the judges on the disciplinary chamber are appointed
by the President following consolation by the National Council of
the Judiciary. In this context, the Supreme Court noted that the
independence of the National Council of the Judiciary is itself
open to question, following its recent reform that resulted in the
15 judiciary members now being elected by the Parliament. In light
of this, the Supreme Court decided to refer this question to the
Court of Justice of the European Union. On 26 November 2018, the
Court granted the request of the Polish Supreme Court and decided
to hear the case under accelerated procedure.
71. On 27 June 2019, in his opinion before the Court on that matter,
the Advocate General of the European Union considered that the manner
of appointment of the members of the National Council of the Judiciary compromises
its independence from the legislative and executive authorities.
This, in turn, gives legitimate reasons to doubt the independence
of the Disciplinary Chamber of the Supreme Court. As a result, in
his view the newly established Disciplinary Chamber does not satisfy
the requirements of judicial independence established by EU law.
At the moment of writing,
the Court of Justice of the European Union has not delivered its
judgment, but we note that the opinions of the Advocate General
are often followed by the Court. The ramifications for the justice
system would be devastating if not immediately addressed. Given
the clear questions raised about the independence of the National
Council of the Judiciary, we can only urge the authorities to revisit
the reforms of this important institution without delay.
3.4. Reform
of the common courts
72. The Act on the Organisation
of the Common Courts was amended by the Polish Parliament in March and
July 2017. Despite strong domestic and international criticism of
these amendments, they were signed into law by the President of
Poland on 25 July 2017.
Following the
launch of an infringement procedure by the European Union on the
grounds that the differentiation of the new retirement age between
male and female judges amounted to a violation of EU anti-discrimination
legislation, the Parliament adopted further amendments to the law.
These amendments sought to address – as we will outline below in
our view only partially – some of the criticism on the Act.
73. Already, under the previous incarnation of the Act, the Minister
of Justice had extensive, and in our view excessive, powers
over the Polish justice system,
including with regard to the appointment and dismissal of court
presidents, disciplinary proceedings against judges and the internal
organisation of the courts. These already extensive powers and competencies
were considerably strengthened by the amendments to the Act on the
Organisation of the Common Courts.
74. Following its adoption, the Act allowed for a 6-month transitional
period, during which the Minister of Justice could appoint and dismiss
court presidents and vice-presidents fully at his discretion, without
the possibility for these decisions to be appealed. Reportedly,
more than 160 court presidents and vice-presidents – about 20% of
all such positions – were arbitrarily dismissed and replaced by
the Minister. Even following this period, the Minister of Justice
maintained his nearly full discretion over the appointment over
court presidents. As mentioned by the Venice Commission and the
CCJE, the judiciary itself should have an involvement in these appointments.
Normally, this could have been through the National Council of the
Judiciary. However, following the changes to its appointment procedure
(which do not allow for a decisive influence of the judiciary itself)
this is no longer enough to ensure that the appointment and process
would adhere to European standards.
75. Following the expiry of the 6-month transitional period, the
Minister of Justice needs to justify a dismissal on substantive
grounds. However, the grounds provided for this in the law are very
broadly formulated and allow for considerable discretion by the
Minister. For example, legal grounds for dismissal are: “
serious or persistent failure to comply with
official duties” “
particularly
ineffective management of the court” and “
other reasons which render the remaining in
office incompatible with the sound administration of justice”.
After the amendments adopted in April 2018, the Minister must ask
an opinion of the college of the court whose (vice) president the
Minister wishes to dismiss. If the college disagrees, then the Minister
needs to request an opinion of the National Council of the Judiciary,
which can decide with a two-thirds majority to block the dismissal.
In the context of our concerns regarding
the composition of the National Council of the Judiciary, we question whether
the requirement for a two-thirds majority by the High Council of
the Judiciary to block the dismissal of a court (vice) president
constitutes an effective safeguard against the possible abuse of
powers by the Minister of Justice. An additional concern is that
a decision to dismiss a court (vice) president cannot be appealed before
a court of law, which seems incompatible with the findings of the
European Court of Human Rights in the case of
Baka
v. Hungary.
76. The Act on the Organisation of the Common Courts has increased
and strengthened the roles of the Minister of Justice in disciplinary
proceedings against judges. The Act provides for the possibility
for higher level court presidents, or the Minister of Justice, to
admonish
lower level court (vice) presidents
regarding alleged mismanagement. The lower level court (vice) president
can appeal to the Minister of Justice, who has the final say. Such
admonishments can lead to a 50% reduction of post allowance for
up to 6 months. In addition, court presidents are obliged to submit
an annual report of activities to the Minister of Justice. While the
reporting in itself is not problematic per se, the Minister of Justice
may, on the basis of these reports, decrease or increase post allowances.
These decisions by the Minister cannot be appealed. These indirect disciplinary
mechanisms are of concern. As mentioned by the Venice Commission,
they create a de facto pyramid of hierarchical power with the Minister
at the top, which undermines both the internal and external independence
of the judiciary.
Such disciplinary powers
should not be given unchecked to the Minster and court presidents,
especially not without the possibility of a legal appeal by those
concerned.
77. Also, the powers of the Minister of Justice in formal disciplinary
proceedings against judges have been considerably increased under
the new Act and are of concern. The judges at the disciplinary chambers
of first level and appellate courts are now selected by the Minister
after consultation with the National Council of the Judiciary.
As
we outlined in a previous section, the Minister can appoint a disciplinary
officer from among the judges, or in case of criminal allegations,
from the prosecution service. This is compounded by the fact that
the Minister of Justice himself is also the prosecutor general,
who personally may take over and intervene in the disciplinary proceedings.
78. The Act on the Organisation of Ordinary Courts originally
brought the retirement age for judges down from 67 to 65, for male
judges and 60 for female judges. The European Commission considered
this divergence in the retirement age for male and female judges
a violation of EU antidiscrimination legislation. It therefore opened
an infringement procedure and brought a case before the Court of
Justice of the European Union. In response, the 12 April 2018 amendments
introduced the same retirement age of 65 years for both male and
female judges but allowed female judges, at their own request, to
retire at 60 years of age. The new retirement age has taken immediate
effect on sitting judges. The tenure of judges can be prolonged
until the age of 70, in case of a need resulting from the workload
of the individual court. At first, this was the prerogative of the
Minister of Justice; but since the 12 April 2018 amendments, it
is now the National Council of the Judiciary that decides on the
request to continue working after the retirement age. GRECO reported
that, by May 2018, despite the 600 open vacancies in the Judiciary,
only 32 prolongations of contract had been granted out of the 130
such requests.
79. On 5 November 2019, the Court of Justice of the European Union
issued its judgment
with regard to the
lowering of the retirement age of common court judges and prosecutors.
In its judgment, the Court ruled that Poland broke EU law by establishing
a different retirement age for male and female judges and prosecutors.
The Court also ruled against lowering the retirement age for common
court judges, while giving the Minister of Justice the power to
decide on the prolongation of the tenure of judges beyond the retirement age.
In the view of the Court, the combination of the lowering of the
retirement age and the arbitrary power of the Minister of Justice
to prologue the tenure violated the principle of irremovability
of judges. Following the judgment, the Polish authorities stated
that the findings of the judgment had already been addressed with
the 12 April 2018 amendments. However, it is not clear how this
judgment will affect the 98 judges that were forced into early retirement
and whose tenure was not prolonged before the adoption of the 12
April 2018 amendments.
80. In a welcome development, the new act introduced the random
assignment of cases among judges. However, according to the rules
of procedure of the ordinary courts,
the
Minister of Justice maintains considerable competences in the assignment
of cases.
Court chairpersons have maintained
their competencies in altering the composition of the benches, including
the right to replace a judge hearing a case for the sake of the
efficiency of the proceedings.
81. We wish to highlight that several of the above-mentioned shortcomings
already existed in the law before it was amended by the current
Parliament. However, the amendments adopted in 2017 and 2018 not
only failed to (fully) address these shortcomings, but in a number
of cases – substantially – aggravated them.
3.5. Reform
the Supreme Court
82. As mentioned above, despite
strong criticisms from domestic and international partners, the
new law on the Supreme Court, as proposed by the President of the
Republic, was adopted by the Sejm on 8 December 2017 and by the
Senate on 15 December 2017. The President signed both laws into
force five days later on 20 December 2017. The main, controversial
provisions of this law entail the creation of two new chambers in the
Supreme Court: one for hearing disciplinary proceedings against
Supreme Court judges; and one for hearing the so-called extraordinary
appeals as well as electoral and public law disputes. The new law
provides that lay members are part of the benches in these chambers.
Moreover, the law lowered the retirement age for Supreme Court Judges,
including for sitting judges, from 70 to 65, but gave the President
of the Republic large discretion to allow individual judges to continue
working beyond the new retirement age.
83. The law foresees the creation of two new chambers for the
Supreme Court, which have special powers that, de facto, put them
above the other chambers of the Court. According to the law, in
both chambers’ judgments will be made with the participation of
lay members.
These
lay members are elected by the Polish Senate for a four-year term.
No requirements regarding legal knowledge
and
education – not even the requirement of having finalised secondary
education is obligatory – are set in the law for these members. Moreover,
the first president of the Supreme Court has full discretion in
appointing the lay members to the bench of the disciplinary and
extra ordinary appeals chambers. The participation of lay members,
as foreseen in the law, is problematic. Both chambers deal with
cases that are legally very complex and sensitive, and the participation
of lay members without legal knowledge could, as mentioned by the
Venice Commission, endanger the efficiency and quality of the judicial
proceedings.
The other judges on these
chambers are selected by the NCJ, whose independence is questionable
as a result of the appointment procedure for its own members.
The
appointment procedure for lay member by the Senate, combined with
the selection of the judges by the NCJ and the full discretion accorded
to the first president of the Supreme Court to appoint them to the
different benches, make the proceedings vulnerable to political
abuse. This concern is reinforced by reference to social justice
in the provisions dealing with the extraordinary appeals procedure
(see below). During our visit to Warsaw in September 2019, Professor
Gersdorf, the current first President of the Supreme Court, expressed
her serious concerns about the establishment of the extraordinary
appeals chamber, which de facto functioned as a court within the
court, whose members are not equal to other Supreme Court Judges. This
is reflected in their higher salaries.
84. The law on the Supreme Court introduces the possibility of
extraordinary control or extraordinary appeals to revise legally
binding judgments from other courts, including the other chambers
of the Supreme Court itself. These extraordinary appeals can be
initiated by the Ombudsperson and by the Minister of Justice in
his ex officio capacity as the General Prosecutor. Both have very
broad discretion with regard to the grounds for filing an extraordinary
appeal,
which include filling an appeal
for “the sake of social justice “. While the principle of reopening
of closed cases under very strict circumstances and criteria is
not per se problematic, the instrument of extraordinary appeals
provided for in the Act is of serious concern as it violates the
principles of legal certainty and
res
judicata. This is compounded by the excessively broad
time limits to file such an extraordinary appeal. In criminal law
cases, where reversal would be in the detriment of the accused,
the appeal has to be filed within six months after the final judgment.
In all other cases, the time-limit is five years and, as a transitional measure,
in the first three years after the adoption of the law, appeals
can be filed to reopen any case decided after 17 October 1997! Moreover,
extraordinary appeals can be filed against the court decisions reached
in these reopened cases. As the Venice Commission rightfully concludes:
“no judgment in the Polish system will ever be final anymore”.
The
mechanism of extraordinary control “jeopardises the stability of
the Polish legal order”
and should be reconsidered.
85. We were informed that, until now, only the Ombudsperson has
availed himself of his right to file an extraordinary appeal, despite
his publicly stated reservations about the legality of this new
legal procedure. When questioned about this contradiction, he informed
us that more that 4000 requests to initiate an extraordinary appeal
had been received by him from the public. By categorically refusing
to use this mechanism available to him, he would open himself up
to accusations of abuse of powers. Therefore, while maintaining
his reservations about the legal principle of the extraordinary
appeal, he had filed a small number of them, where he felt that
they could potentially address serious existing social injustices.
86. The newly established Chamber on Extraordinary Control and
Public Affairs of the Supreme Court is responsible for hearing all
election related appeals, including for European Parliament elections.
As we outlined above,
due to the appointment of its members,
the independence and impartiality of this new chamber is open to
question, and it is vulnerable to political pressure and interference.
As a result, it is not perceived as an independent and impartial
arbiter in election-related complaints by all stakeholders, which
is crucial for a democratic election process. Given its role in
adjudicating European Parliament election-related appeals, any questions
regarding its impartiality and independence therefore potentially
affect all European Union
member states.
87. In our view, there is a serious risk that the introduction
of the extraordinary appeal in Poland could considerably increase
the number of applications against Poland before the European Court
of Human Rights in Strasbourg. This view was shared by many of our
interlocutors in Warsaw. This underscores our concern that, as a
result of the judicial reforms in Poland, the European legal structures
such as the European Court of Human Rights and CJEU will increasingly
become the facto court of last resort for Polish citizens, which
is of concern.
88. An aspect that very visibly created considerable controversy
was the provision in the law that reduced the retirement age of
members of the Supreme Court from the age of 70 to the age of 65.
This provision also applied retroactively for sitting members. This
provision reportedly affected 27 Judges, including the First President
of the Supreme Court. This provision was therefore widely viewed
as an overt attempt by the authorities to stack the Supreme Court
with party supporters and to bring it under control of the ruling
majority. One of the stated arguments of the authorities for lowering
the retirement age has been the need to decommunise the Supreme
Court. In the introduction of this report, we already expressed
our general concern about the lustration aspects of these reforms
which we will not repeat here. However, we wish to highlight that a
key principle of lustration is the need to prove the individual
guilt of the persons concerned by these processes. The lowering
of the retirement age of all judges to remove a few individuals
amounts to collective punishment in violation Council of Europe
norms. In this context, it should also be noted that a lustration process
was carried out in Poland in 1990 and that 80% of the Supreme Court
judges were removed from their function at that time. The new retirement
age reportedly only affected one judge that served in communist times,
clearly raising questions about this stated objective.
89. As a transitional measure, the law allowed serving Supreme
Court judges who had reached the age of 65 before the law went into
force, or at the latest on 3 July 2018, to request an extension
of their mandate until 70 years of age from the President of the
Republic. The law gave the President full discretion to accept or
deny such a request, or even not to act on it. The latter would
lead automatically to the retirement of the judge in question. No
legal appeal against the decision of the President is possible.
This gives the President of the Republic excessive influence over
judges reaching their retirement age. To our knowledge,
until
these provisions were frozen by the temporary measures of the CJEU,
12 Supreme Court Judges asked for an extension of their mandate.
Of these, only five requests were accepted by the President.
90. As mentioned, the retrospective lowering of the retirement
age for the Supreme Court was controversial and decried by national
and international actors. Professor Malgorzata Gersdorf, the first
President of the Supreme Court, noting that her term in office is
set in the Constitution and cannot be altered by ordinary legislation,
refused any notion of early retirement and continued working. On
3 October 2018, the European Commission filed a complaint with the
Court of Justice of the European Union in Luxembourg on the grounds that
the forced early retirement of judges, combined with the discretionary
mechanism allowing the President of Poland to selectively grant
an extension of the mandate, violated the principle of irremovability
of judges. It thus, according to the Commission, undermined the
independence of the judiciary and infringed EU law. The Commission
requested the Court, as interim measure, to order the Polish authorities
to, inter alia: suspend the application of the provisions of national
legislation relating to the lowering of the retirement age for Supreme Court
judges; to ensure that the Supreme Court judges would remain in
their position, with the same rights and able to perform their duties;
and to refrain from adopting any measures to replace the Supreme
Court judges concerned by the retroactive lowering of the retirement
age. Pending the final decision of the Court, its Vice-President
preliminarily granted the request of interim measures by the European
Commission. This was confirmed when, on 17 December 2018, the Court
decided to grant the requested interim measures in full and ordered
Poland, inter alia, to immediately suspend the application of the
provisions of national legislation relating to the lowering of the
retirement age for Supreme Court judges.
91. On 21 November 2018, following the provisional granting of
the interim measures, the Polish Parliament had adopted the required
legislation to reverse the provisions in the law regarding the early
retirement of Supreme Court judges. This legislation was signed
in force by President Duda on 17 December 2018, after the Court
had issued its judgment.
92. On 24 June 2019, the Court of Justice of the European Union
issued its final judgment in case C-619/18 of the Commission against
Poland regarding the lowering of the retirement age of judges of
the Polish Supreme Court. In its judgment
the Court considered
that the lowering of the retirement age of judges of the Supreme Court
is not justified by a legitimate objective and undermines the principle
of irremovability of judges, which is essential to their independence.
Furthermore, it considered that the procedure allowing the President
to give an extension to the retirement age is discretionary and
could allow for external pressure and influence on judges, again
undermining their independence. The Court therefore ruled that the
Polish legislation concerning the lowering of the retirement age
of judges of the Supreme Court is contrary to EU law.
93. The Act on the Supreme Court stipulates that the first President
of the Supreme Court is appointed by the President of Poland from
a list of five candidates selected by the General Assembly of the
Supreme Court. Under previous legislation, this choice was made
from a list of two proposed candidates. The new legislation therefore
grants the President considerably more discretion in his choice.
The legalisation also gives considerable discretionary powers to
the first President of the Supreme Court, including about disciplinary proceedings
and the composition of the benches. Moreover, as we already mentioned,
the first President of the Supreme Court has complete discretion
regarding the appointment of the lay members of the benches of the
disciplinary chambers and the chamber for extraordinary appeals.
While individually, these discretionary powers are not problematic
per se, cumulatively they make the Court vulnerable to political
abuse. This is particularly concerning, given the attempts to politicise
the Court we are currently witnessing in Poland.
3.6. Combined
effects
94. While we have discussed the
different parts and acts of the judicial reform in Poland in separate
sections, it should be noted that they are part of a comprehensive
and integrated reform of the judiciary and justice system. The different
acts and measures are designed, and act to, complement and reinforce
each other. Naturally, our concerns expressed on the different parts
of legislation therefore also compound and reinforce each other.
While individual aspects of the different acts and policies discussed
are already of serious concern, when taken cumulatively these acts
“
bring the judiciary under direct control
of the parliamentary majority and President of the Republic – contrary
to the very principle of separation of powers.” The acts also open the justice
system to political abuse and endanger the rule of law in the country.
This cannot have been the objective of these reforms and, in our
view, is unacceptable. The Polish authorities should therefore be
urged to promptly address all the concerns identified both in this
report and in reports from the Venice Commission and to implement
their corresponding recommendations.
4. Disciplinary
proceedings against judges
95. As we outlined in the previous
sections, a main objective of the reform started after the 2015
legislative elections has been to bring the judiciary firmly under
the control of the ruling majority. In that context, the reports of
disciplinary proceedings against, and harassment of, judges and
prosecutors who are seen as acting against the interests of the
ruling majority, or who have been openly critical of the reforms,
is extremely concerning. This is all the more the case since recent
disclosures that a campaign of harassment of judges was orchestrated
with the involvement of leading personalities in the Ministry of
Justice and High Council of Justice closely connected to the current
ruling majority. We will outline this so-called Piebiak
affair
below.
96. In our discussions on the Act on the Ordinary Courts, the
Act on the Supreme Court and the Act on the Public Prosecutor, we
already expressed our concern that the disciplinary mechanism for
judges and prosecutors established by these acts are open to political
abuse. In addition, as we outlined when discussing the Act on the
National Council of the Judiciary, after the initial appointment
of a judge, promotions and transfers (including ones that can be
considered as de facto demotions) are fully the prerogative of the
Minister of Justice. Similarly, as we outlined in the context of
the Act on the Public Prosecutor, the Minister of Justice- in his
function of Prosecutor General-has practically full control over
the careers of individual prosecutors.
97. As we mentioned in the section on the reform of the prosecution
service, since the adoption of the law, at least 114 prosecutors
have been transferred to other posts in what several interlocutors
alleged to be politically motivated demotions. The fact that a number
of board members of the national prosecutor’s association “Lex Super
Omnia” – which represents the interest of individual prosecutors
and which has been publicly critical of the prosecution service
reforms – have been placed under disciplinary investigation for allegedly
violating the dignity of their profession gives some credence to
these allegations.
98. According to the Polish Constitution, judges cannot be members
of political parties or engage in activities that would be incompatible
with the principle of the independence of the courts and judiciary.
While judges should refrain from political activities, the law does
not clearly define what amounts to political activity and what is
protected under the right to freedom of speech.
While we concur with the prohibition
of party-political activities for judges, this cannot have the effect
of forbidding judges from being able to express an opinion on the
legal system and changes to it that would affect them directly.
99. Regrettably, on numerous occasions, disciplinary proceedings
have been initiated against judges who have been critical about
the judicial reforms and their effect on judicial independence.
Apparently, these criticisms have been the main motivation behind
these proceedings. Even more disturbingly, disciplinary proceedings
have been started against judges for decisions they have taken when
adjudicating cases.
Of particular concern
in that context are the disciplinary proceedings started for “judicial
excess” against judges, including seven Supreme Court judges, who
used their statutory right to request a preliminary ruling of the Court
of Justice of the European Union on the compliance of provisions
on disciplinary liability of judges with EU legislation.
Regrettably,
the list of such cases is extensive as demonstrated by several well
documented reports.
100. A key issue of concern is the fact that after prosecutors
and judges have been informed by the Disciplinary Inspectors that
a disciplinary investigation has been started against them, these
investigations often continue indefinitely without formal disciplinary
charges being brought before the relevant disciplinary chambers.
This puts the judges and prosecutors concerned in a precarious limbo,
being investigated but not being able to defend themselves against
the alleged violations that led to these investigations. The Chairperson of
the National Council of the Judiciary informed us that, in the last
year and a half, 1174 disciplinary investigations were started.
Only in 71 instances
had disciplinary cases been opened. Of these cases 34 had been brought
to the court, while the others were closed without wrongdoing found.
Of the 34 cases brought before the disciplinary tribunals, 19 had
been adjudicated (in either first or second instance). In cases
were disciplinary violations had been found by the court, the most
frequent sanction had been an official reprimand or notice in the
file of the person concerned. The very high number of disciplinary
investigations started, combined with the very small number of disciplinary
cases that result from them, raise serious questions about the underlying
reasons for these investigations and the grounds and justification
on which they are started. Irrespective of the small number of actual
disciplinary cases opened, the large number of investigations started by
disciplinary officers directly accountable to the Minster of Justice,
and the time it takes to close these investigations, if at all,
clearly has a chilling effect on the judiciary and affects their
independence.
101. Similar to what we heard from the prosecutors’ association,
representatives of the judges’ associations Iustitia and Themis,
as well as members of the board of the Polish Bar Association that
assist judges in disciplinary proceedings, informed us that practically
all of them had been placed under disciplinary investigation. The
investigation is reportedly often based on vague and subjective
charges such as violating the dignity of the judicial profession.
102. In addition to the reports on disciplinary proceedings, we
have also received several reports about cases where the Minister
of Justice has used his extensive rights to transfer judges to places
that can de facto be considered a demotion, or to otherwise make
decisions that aversely affected the careers of judges and prosecutors
who had allegedly criticised the judicial reforms or adjudicated
in particular cases in a manner not favoured by the authorities.
As we mentioned earlier, it is beyond the scope of this report to
discuss these individual cases but it underscores our concerns about
the vulnerability to political abuse of the provisions on disciplinary
proceedings as well as the excessive powers of the Minister of Justice
over the judiciary and justice system.
103. In this context, the negative portrayal, even stigmatisation,
of the judiciary and individual judges and prosecutors by high ranking
members of the authorities and ruling majority, as well as the public
media, is of concern. This deteriorates public trust in the judiciary,
contrary to the stated aims of the reforms initiated by the government
and can have a chilling effect on individual judges.
104. The issue of politically motivated smear campaigns and harassment
of judges and prosecutors came to the foreground when a political
scandal broke out broke out on 19 August 2019. The scandal involved
Deputy Justice Minister Lukasz Piebiak who was, until then, one
of the main driving forces be behind the reform of the judiciary.
On that day, the Onet news portal, published alleged WhatsApp and
Facebook communications between Deputy Justice Minister Piebiak
and a woman called Emelia. Other newspaper reports later identified Emelia
as the wife of a leading judge with close connections to the ruling
party. According to these communications, which were widely distributed
on the internet, Emelia executed a smear campaign against several
judges at the behest of Mr Piebiak, who also allegedly orchestrated
the campaign and provided her with personal information about these
judges, including their private addresses, which would constitute
a gross violation of privacy regulations. In addition to Mr Piebiak,
two other judges seconded to the Ministry of Justice, alongside
two members and an employee from the National Council of the Judiciary,
were identified as being involved in this smear campaign that targeted,
among others, the President of the Iustitia judges’ association. According
to Emilia, in subsequent interviews, the actions of her and her
co-conspirators would have harmed the careers and private lives
of at least 20 judges.
105. Mr Piebiak, while denying the allegations, and alleging that
the published message exchanges had been fabricated, resigned on
20 August 2019.
The President of the National
Council of the Judiciary informed us that the Council, while condemning
the smear campaign, had failed to come to an agreement on how to
deal with the issue of the members that were allegedly involved
in what amounts to be a troll farm to smear members of the judiciary.
In order to protect the independence of the members of the NCJ,
the only manner a sitting member can be removed is by disbarring
him or her. This was clearly not one of the competencies of the
NCJ. However, the President of the National Council of the Judiciary
informed us that, using his prerogatives as President with regard
to the composition of committees and working groups of the Council,
he had removed the two members from any committee that dealt with
appointments or other career issues, as well as policy matters pending
the investigation into these matters. The revelation of the existence
of this troll farm caused an uproar inside the government, with
the Prime Minister officially asking for an explanation from the
Minister of Justice. The latter has denied any involvement in this
case and announced that he had asked the Prosecution Service to
launch an official investigation
106. The First Deputy Minister of Justice, and ministry officials
we met, categorically insisted that, if the allegations turned out
to be true, this smear campaign had been the work of individuals
and in no manner could be linked to the Ministry as an institution.
This again was questioned by a number of interlocutors, who noted that,
in some of the message exchanges, Mr Piebiak indicated that “his
boss” would be happy with the results of the Emilia’s activities.
Even if not organised by the Ministry – and despite the allegations
we heard, we have no concrete indications that this would have been
the case – it is clear that the alleged smear campaign was organised
from within the Ministry, with the involvement of high ranking officials
in the Ministry and National Council of Justice, who are responsible
for the justice reforms and the careers of judges and prosecutors.
This is both deplorable and of serious concern. As mentioned, the
Minister of Justice has announced that the Prosecution Service has
started an investigation into these allegations. However, given
the tight control of the Minister of Justice over the Prosecution
Service, the trust of the stakeholders and public in the efficiency
and impartiality of these investigations is very low, if not non-existent.
For the benefit of both the legal system in Poland, including the
Ministry of Justice itself, we therefore call upon the authority
to establish, at their earliest convenience, but by 31 March 2019
at the latest, an independent, impartial public enquiry commission,
whose composition and mandate should be in line with accepted European
standards for such independent investigations.
107. There has been increasing concern about the disciplinary regime
for judges and prosecutors among Poland’s international partners.
On 9 April 2019, the European Commission launched a new infringement procedure
against Poland on the grounds that its disciplinary regime for judges
undermined judicial independence and does “not protect them from
political control”. In its decision, the Commission specifically mentioned
the fact that, according to Polish legislation, disciplinary proceedings
can be started against judges on the basis of the content of their
judgments. In addition, the Commission argued that the disciplinary
regime does not “
guarantee the independence
and impartiality of the disciplinary chambers Disciplinary Chamber
of the Supreme Court, which is composed solely of judges selected
by the National Council for the Judiciary, which is itself politically
appointed by the Polish Parliament (Sejm)”.
As the Polish authorities failed
to address the concerns of the Commission, the latter decided, on
10 October 2019, to refer Poland to the European Court of Justice.
Given the importance of this issue for the independence of the judiciary
and rule of law in Poland, the European Commission asked the Court
to an expedite the procedure. On 19 November 2019, the CJEU delivered
its judgment in joint cases C-585/18, C-624/18 and C-625/18 regarding
the independence of the Disciplinary Chamber of the Supreme Court.
In this judgment, the CJEU considered that the manner by which this
chamber has been formed and its members appointed has given “
rise to legitimate doubts, in the minds of subjects
of the law, as to the imperviousness of that court to external factors,
in particular, as to the direct or indirect influence of the legislature
and the executive and its neutrality with respect to the interests
before it.”
While not outright
ruling that this special disciplinary chamber of the Supreme Court
lacked the required independence, it held that the Supreme Court
should consider in each individual case whether this chamber had
the required independence to hear the particular case. Therefore,
in EU law related cases – which include the cases on the retiring
of judges of the Supreme Court – the CJEU decided to disapply the
provisions in the domestic legislation that give exclusive jurisdiction
to the Special Chamber to hear the retirement cases. We hope that
this judgment will entice the Polish authorities to address the
legitimate concerns with regard to the independence of the Special
Disciplinary chamber. This is especially the case in the context
of several pending cases in front of the CJEU which have the independence
and impartiality of this body is at the heart of them.
5. Miscellaneous
Issues
108. As we mentioned in the introduction,
this report has focused on the reforms of the judiciary and justice system.
However, during our work, several other reforms and developments
were brought to our attention that raised questions and concerns.
Even though we cannot discuss them in detail in this report, in
our view these developments warrant the attention of the Monitoring
Committee and Assembly, including through expediting a periodic
review report on Poland that should, inter alia, cover these issues.
Nevertheless, several issues were raised frequently, and we wish
to outline these in summary in this report.
5.1. Law
on assemblies
109. In December 2016, the Sejm
adopted a series of amendments to the law on assemblies. These amendments,
inter alia, stipulate that assemblies can be prohibited if they
coincided with so-called cyclical assemblies. These are defined
as demonstrations organised by the same organiser at least four
times a year, or on a yearly basis for more than three years. In
the draft law, it was originally proposed that no demonstration would
be allowed to coincide with official assemblies organised by the
public authorities or by the Church. However, this provision was
removed by the legislator during the adoption process. On 29 December
2016, the President sent this law to the Constitutional Court for
an opinion on its constitutionality. On 17 March, the Constitutional
Court ruled that the law was constitutional, after which it was
signed into force by President Duda.
110. During the first visit of the rapporteurs in 2017, the law
and its effects were discussed with different stakeholders. It became
clear that the main practical effect of this law is that counter
demonstrations are not allowed to take place within a 100-metre
perimeter of the protest against which they are held. While this
may limit counter demonstrations on some occasions, we note that
several, if not most, member states have public order regulation
that spatially separate manifestations and their counter manifestations.
111. While we are not aware of any other member states with similar
provisions regarding cyclical demonstrations, they do not run counter
to European standards per se, unless the cyclical status would only be
available to a limited group or type of organisations or manifestations.
While we were initially informed that the cyclical status would
be reserved for “historical” or “cultural” manifestations, the authorities
informed us that, in practice, there are no such limitations. Therefore,
as long as no discriminatory practices take place when attributing
cyclical status to manifestations, these provisions do not raise
concerns. Moreover, after the initial focus on these provisions,
the public and media attention to this law subsided and initial
concerns thankfully did not materialise.
5.2. Reform
of the public media
112. Poland has a pluralist, well
developed, but also highly polarised media environment at both national
and regional level. The media landscape encompasses a wide range
of printed press as well as radio and television outlets. Like in
many countries, television stations are a main source of information
in Poland, with public television playing an important role, although
its market share is declining. Internet is becoming an increasingly important
source of information, with internet access enjoyed by well over
75% of the population.
Private media is mostly
controlled by foreign investors and media concerns. This has been
a thorn in the eye of, inter alia, the authorities which have called
for the re-polonisation of the media sector.
113. The Polish Constitution guarantees freedom of the press. It
provides for a National Broadcasting Council, also known by its
Polish abbreviation KRRiT, with the objective to “safeguard the
freedom of speech, the right to information, and the public interest
in radio and television broadcasting.” It is composed of five members
appointed for a six-year term: two by the Sejm, two by the President
of Poland and one by the Senate. Until the adoption of the so-called
“small media law” in 2016 (see below), the National Broadcasting
Council was responsible for the appointment of the supervisory and
management boards of the public radio and television broadcasters.
While the members of the KRRiT cannot be members of a political
party, they remain political appointees and normally reflect the
political majority in parliament that appointed them.
114. As mentioned, the overall media landscape is pluralist, but
highly polarised, with the different individual private media outlets
reflecting the political preferences of their owners. Regrettably,
the public broadcaster does not provide an impartial counterweight.
As the result of the above described appointment procedure for the
KRRiT, the public broadcaster has historically been biased in favour
of the party or coalition that has the majority in the Parliament.
While there have been reforms of the National Broadcasting Council
under several previous governments of different political colour,
none of these reforms addressed the political bias of the National
Broadcasting Council, for example by enshrining a genuinely technocrat
composition.
115. While biased in favour of the ruling majority that appoints
them, the terms in office of the National Broadcasting Council and
supervisory boards of the public broadcaster are different from
those of the Parliament. Therefore, following the 2015 elections,
the new ruling majority found itself in a situation where the public
broadcaster was perceived as, and was, biased against it, which
it considered to be an unacceptable situation.
116. On 28 December 2015, the ruling majority tabled the so-called
small media law in the Parliament which, despite domestic and international
criticism, adopted this law two days later. The stated objective
of the law was to rationalise the, by all accounts, bloated
structure
of the public broadcasters. However, a key provision of the law
was to move the appointment of the members of the supervisory and
management boards of the public radio and tv from the National Broadcasting
Council to the Ministry of Finance, and to terminate all mandates
of all siting members of these bodies. This therefore brought the
public broadcaster firmly under the control of the new authorities.
117. The small media law had a temporary character. On 2 April
2016, the authorities tabled three new media laws, collectively
known as the “big media law”. These draft laws sought to transform
the public broadcasters into national broadcasters obliged to promote
the views of the President, Prime Minister and Speakers of the Sejm
and Senate. These laws were sent to the Council of Europe for an
expertise which concluded that they constitute a move back towards
a state broadcaster.
118. In reaction to the public outcry and domestic and international
criticism against these three draft laws, the authorities decided
to withdraw them from the agenda of the Parliament. Instead, a more
limited law was introduced that moved the appointment of the management
and supervisory bodies of the public broadcasters away from the
Ministry of Finance to a newly established National Media Council.
The National Media Council consist of five members: three appointed
by the Sejm and two by the President of Poland, on the basis of proposals
by the two largest opposition factions in the Sejm. While, in a welcome development,
this ensures the representation of the Council, it does not address
the shortcoming of the politicisation of the media oversight bodies
and their subordination to party political interests
119. Regrettably, the main aim of these legal reforms seems to
have been mainly to move the control over the public broadcaster
from the previous authorities to the new ruling majority. The reforms
did not address at all the problem of the politicised and biased
nature of the public broadcaster. This is a missed opportunity.
The authorities should be urged to address this important weakness
and ensure a genuinely impartial and professional public broadcasting
system in Poland
5.3. Civil
society
120. Poland has a broad and vibrant
civil society, consisting of more than 120.000 different civil society organisations
(CSOs). Regrettably, the political discourse about civil society
has hardened and the environment for CSOs to operate is deteriorating.
Many CSO interlocutors have noted an increasing lack of consultation
and dialogue between authorities and civil society as, inter alia,
demonstrated by the fact that many new pieces of legislation have
been introduced as private member bills which are not subject to
the consultation process that is legally required for government
bills.
121. The current authorities have a clear worldview about Polish
society and the norms and values which, in their view, define the
Polish identity. The strengthening and cementing of this identity
and associated norms and values in the Polish society is a clearly
stated objective and priority of the PiS and its coalition partners. Regrettably,
CSOs that are critical to one or the other policy of the authorities,
or do not share the word view of the authorities, are increasingly
painted as a fifth column for the current opposition. This has led
to an environment were dialogue and consultation between authorities
and CSOs is selective and limited, based on ideological proximity.
This seems confirmed by the fact that CSOs that are ideologically
close to the authorities and their allies do not share the view
that the CSO environment is shrinking or deteriorating. This division
is of concern, especially since we have received indications that
this division is also reflected in the distribution of government
funding among CSOs.
122. In September 2017, the Polish Parliament adopted the Act on
“the National Institute of Freedom – Centre for Civil Society Development”
which, inter alia, is responsible for the distribution of government
funding, as well as nationally attributed EU funding, to NGOs. NGOs
have complained that they are in the minority on the Council, which
is chaired by a member of the Polish cabinet, thus very much limiting
their influence in the attribution process.
123. Another act affecting civil society, and a point that underscores
some of our concerns with regard to the drive by the ruling majority
to instil its world view and value base on the Polish society, is
the act on the Institute of National Remembrance. This act introduces
criminal liability for any statements that imply any responsibility of
Poland and the Polish nation for Nazi Crimes. The adoption of this
bill created quite some controversy, both domestically and internationally.
It is evident that the provisions in this law limit freedom of expression
and hinders freely discussing Poland’s recent history. These developments
have also affected academia. In January 2017, an exhibition opened
in the Museum of the Second World War in Gdansk. This exhibition reportedly
took a novel approach to presenting the events of 1939 to 1945,
which did not follow the more conventional view on Polish history
that is promoted by the current authorities. This led to the replacement
of the museum’s director by the Minister of Culture. The new director
then considerably altered the exhibition to bring it in line with
the more traditionalist views promoted by the ruling majority.
5.4. Intolerance
and hate speech
124. As mentioned previously, the
Ruling Party espouses a clear view about the Polish national identity
and the values and norms that, in its view, underline this identity.
Regrettably the public discourse by members of the ruling majority
has increasingly become less tolerant about individuals and groups
that do not conform to these, very narrow, values or have diverging
views on its social agenda. This intolerant discourse has created a
permissive environment and a sense of impunity for hate speech –
and even violent actions – against minorities and other, vulnerable,
groups, especially LGTBI people who are painted as a threat to the
Polish national identity.
125. This intolerant discourse is also affecting the debate on
womens’ rights, which has become increasingly polarised and contentious.
Reportedly,
there
have been increasing attacks on womens’ rights activists and organisations,
who also have seen their funding being reduced or denied.
In
this context, in her report following her visit to Poland, from
11 to 15 March 2019, the Commissioner for Human Rights of the Council
of Europe expressed her concern that the interruption of access
to central government funding has obliged leading womens’ rights
organisations to limit their activities in recent years, negatively
affecting their ability to help victims of domestic violence.
6. Conclusions
126. The main focus of the Polish
authorities since the current ruling coalition came to power in
2015 has been a far reaching, ambitious and also controversial programme
of reforming the judiciary and justice system. The objective of
these reforms was to address the increasing dissatisfaction of the
Polish population with the shortcomings of the Polish justice system,
which had been a major plank of the ruling party’s election programme.
A second stated objective of the authorities was to address the
lack of accountability and efficiency of the Polish judiciary as
a result of what it considered to be corrupt, corporatist and self-serving
governance structures. At the same time, the newly elected authorities
saw the judiciary as bulwark of the former authorities, now in opposition,
that would use the justice system to thwart and sabotage the overall
reform agenda of the newly elected authorities. Therefore, it is
undeniable that, under the pretext of wanting to de-politicises
the state institutions, one of the main objectives of the judicial
reform programme was to bring the judiciary and justice system firmly
under the control of the newly elected ruling majority.
127. It is undeniable that the Polish justice system and judiciary
are and have been facing systemic problems and challenges that affect
the rule of law, especially with regard to the efficiency of the
administration of justice – as recognised by the judgments of the
European Court of Human Rights in its judgments against Poland.
The need for continuing reforms of the judiciary is clear and recognised.
Therefore, the importance and priority given by the authorities
to address these systemic shortcomings is not only valid but should
be welcomed. At the same time, it is essential that any reforms
implemented are fully in line with European norms and values and
effectively strengthen judicial independence and the rule of law.
128. Similarly, any system of self-governance has an inherent risk
of corporativism and vulnerability to self-interest, and addressing
this vulnerability is a valid reform objective. Again, such reforms
should be in line with European norms and values and aim to improve
judicial self-government by strengthening its transparency and accountability,
while respecting its independence. It would be unacceptable if such
reforms would aim, or amount to, bringing the judiciary under the
control of the executive or legislature, or, even worse, political control
of the ruling majority. This would violate the principle of separation
of powers and would effectively end the independence of the judiciary
and undermine the rule of law.
129. To our great regret, it is clear that the reforms of the judiciary
and justice system in Poland do not pass these two important litmus
tests. The reforms individually and taken together run counter in
numerous aspects to European norms and values. They cumulatively
undermine and severely damage the independence of the judiciary
and the rule of law in Poland. They bring the justice system under
the political control of the executive and ruling majority and challenge
the very principles of a democratic state governed by the rule of
law.
130. The concerns about the independence of the Polish judiciary
and justice system, as well as Poland’s adherence to the rule of
law, affect all European Union member states, as Polish courts are
responsible for upholding EU law in the country. The questions about
the independence of the justice system and the respect for the rule
of law are therefore not considered as internal issues for Poland.
Given the developments in Poland, judges in other European Union
and Council of Europe member states should, where pertinent, ascertain
in criminal cases – including with regard to European Arrest Warrants
– as well as in civil cases, whether fair legal proceedings in Poland,
as meant by Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights,
can be guaranteed for the defendants.
131. Without wanting to mitigate other important concerns regarding
the reforms, we wish to highlight two aspects that, in our opinion,
are especially worrisome: namely, the vulnerability of the newly
reformed justice system to political abuse and manipulation; and
the centralisation of excessive powers over the judiciary in the hands
of the Minister of Justice and, to a lesser extent, the President
of Poland. If one of the stated reform objectives was to depoliticise
state institutions, then these two issues have achieved exactly
the opposite.
132. As outlined above, the subordination of the prosecution to
the Minister of Justice ad personam, and the excessive powers given
to him as Prosecutor General, have made the prosecution service
open to abuse and politicisation. This is compounded by the excessive
powers granted to the Minister of Justice – and to a lesser extent
to the President of the Republic – over the appointment and careers
of judges and the management of the courts. The mere fact that the
justice system is vulnerable to politicisation and abuse is unacceptable
and should have led to immediate action by the authorities, which,
to this very day, has unfortunately still not happened. The abuse
of disciplinary proceedings against judges and prosecutors, and
the smear campaigns organised against them by leading personalities
or persons close to them, in the ruling majority, show that this vulnerability
to abuse and politicisation is unfortunately not a hypothetical
question. The concentration of excessive powers with regard to the
judiciary undermines the independence of the judiciary and the rule
of law in Poland and needs to be addressed without delay. This entails
reforming the current legal framework for career management and
disciplinary mechanisms within the judiciary, with a view to ensuring
its impartiality and complete independence from the executive and
external interest, be it political or corporatist self-interest from
sectors of the judiciary itself.
133. The reform of the National Council of the Judiciary had brought
this institution under the control of the executive, which is incompatible
with the principle of independence. This, in turn, creates the risk
that this institution and a number of others whose composition depends
on it, will be in violation of EU law and other European Rule of
Law and Human Rights mechanisms, including the European Convention
on Human Rights. While supporting efforts to improve the transparency
and accountability of the National Council of the Judiciary, we
call upon the Polish authorities to revisit the reform of the NCJ
and address these concerns.
134. The argument that the Polish justice reforms are automatically
in line with European standards because certain aspects of the reforms
allegedly also exist in other countries, is invalid and should be
disregarded. Even if certain provisions are similar to those in
other countries, they cannot be taken out of the context of the
overall legal framework and legal tradition in which they exist.
Otherwise, this could result in the “Frankensteinisation of legislation”,
where legislation would be based on a combination of “worst practice”
existing in other countries instead of on best practice and common
European standards.
135. From our visit, it is clear that, for part of the Polish population,
the negotiated democratic transition of Poland following the fall
of the Berlin wall, while a model for many, has failed to give closure
for the crimes and excesses committed during the Communist era,
and is perceived as having allowed those who profited from the Communist
regime to have escaped justice for crimes committed and to safeguard
their interests. This is an important consideration for the ruling
majority in guiding its policies. This is understandably a sensitive
and emotional issue but also one that could be misconstrued for
political mobilisation and support. The Polish authorities have
stated that the decommunisation of the judiciary has been one of
the objectives and an underlying reason for the reform of the judiciary
and justice system. However, as we have outlined in our report, based
on objective grounds, the need for lustration cannot be considered
as a valid argument or appropriate guideline for any reforms of
the justice system in Poland.
136. No democratic government respecting the rule of law can decide
to selectively ignore court decisions it does not like. This is
especially true with regard to the judgments of the Constitutional
Court. The first step of the solution of the constitutional crisis
in the country is the implementation of the decisions of the Constitutional Court,
starting with those regarding the composition of the Court itself.
The legality of the composition of the Constitutional Court should
be restored by removal of three of the five so-called “8 October
2015” judges. The authorities should seek advice from the Venice
Commission regarding the manner in which this should be implemented.
The issue of legality of judgments adopted by benches of the Constitutional
Court that included illegally appointed judges should be addressed
in line with European norms and standards.
137. While the focus of the reforms has been on the control over
the judiciary, other reforms initiated indicate that a general objective
of the authorities is to cement, including beyond this electoral
mandate, its vision of a Polish identity and its norms and values
in the institutional framework of Poland. To that extent, several
other reforms, as for instance regarding the media environment,
seem to be aimed at bringing independent institutions and regulatory
bodies under the political control of the authorities. This is concerning
especially in the context of a judiciary whose independence is increasingly
compromised and that is increasingly vulnerable to pressure and
interference from the authorities.
138. The harsh and intolerant political discourse in the Polish
political environment has created an increasingly permissive climate.
It has also fostered a perception of impunity for hate speech and
intolerant behaviour against minorities and other vulnerable groups
which is unacceptable and should be remedied.
139. Due to the deterioration of the independence of the judiciary
in Poland, as well as the increased vulnerability of the legal system
to political interference and abuse by the executive, the European
rule of law and human rights protection mechanisms such as the European
Court of Human Rights and the Court of Justice of the European Union
increasingly risk becoming the de facto court or arbiter of last
resort for Polish citizens and institutions. While the brunt of
the cases has, until now, been before the Court of Justice of the European
Union, there are indications that there will be an increasing number
of applications before the European Court of Human Rights as a result
of the judicial reforms. Not only does this create an unacceptable increase
of workload for the Court, but it also runs counter to the obligation
upon all Council of Europe member states to ensure that the rule
of law and protection of human rights are foremostly guaranteed
by the national justice structures.
140. Following their victory in the 2019 parliamentary elections,
the authorities have indicated that the continuation of the reform
of the judiciary will be one of the main priorities of the new government.
The developments with regard to the judiciary, and especially its
compromised independence and vulnerability to political interference
and control by the executive, are of serious concern. A number of
other reforms that could limit the autonomy of nominatively independent
state institutions and regulatory agencies are equally threatening
for the rule of law and the functioning of democratic institutions
in Poland. They should therefore continue to be followed closely
by the Assembly and its Monitoring Committee. This should take place
in one of two ways: through a follow up report on the functioning
of democratic institutions in Poland; or through expediting the
periodic review report on Poland in the framework of monitoring
of membership obligations of all member states of the Council of
Europe.