'You are playing with fire': EU faces crisis after Polish court ruling
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[October 08, 2021]
By Joanna Plucinska and Sabine Siebold
WARSAW (Reuters) -A Polish court ruling
challenging the supremacy of EU law plunged the European Union into an
existential crisis on Friday and raised the possibility of Poland
leaving the 27-nation bloc.
Politicians across Europe voiced dismay at the court's move to undermine
the legal pillar on which the EU stands, with one minister warning the
eastern European country that it was "playing with fire".
Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission, said she was
"deeply concerned" by the Thursday's ruling by Poland's Constitutional
Tribunal and that the executive she leads would do all in its power to
ensure the primacy of EU law.
Welcoming the court ruling, Poland's prime minister said his country
wanted to stay in the wealthy trade and political group it joined in
2004 but that each member state must be treated equally and with
respect.
Warsaw has long been at odds with Brussels over democratic standards and
the independence of its judiciary. But Thursday's ruling that parts of
EU law are incompatible with the Polish constitution put Warsaw and
Brussels on a full collision course.
"We have to state clearly that this government in Poland is playing with
fire," Luxembourg's minister for foreign affairs, Jean Asselborn, said
on arrival for a meeting of EU ministers in Luxembourg.
"The primacy of European law is essential for the integration of Europe
and living together in Europe. If this principle is broken, Europe as we
know it, as it has been built with the Rome treaties, will cease to
exist."
French European Affairs Minister Clement Beaune said the Polish
Constitutional Tribunal's ruling was an attack on the EU that could lead
to economic sanctions against Warsaw.
"It is most serious ... There is the de facto risk of an exit from the
European Union," Beaune told BFM TV, adding that he did not want Poland
to leave the bloc.
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The flags of Poland and European Union flutter in front of the
Polish parliament in Warsaw June 29, 2011. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel
NO PLANS FOR 'POLEXIT'
Poland's Law and Justice (PiS) party government says it has no plans
for a "Polexit" and - unlike Britain before its Brexit referendum in
2016 - popular support for membership of the EU is high in Poland.
The Constitutional Tribunal took on the case after Prime Minister
Mateusz Morawiecki asked it whether EU institutions could stop
Poland from reorganising its judiciary.
"We want a community of respect and not a grouping of those who are
equal and more equal. This is our community, our Union," Morawiecki
said on Facebook, referring to the EU. "This is the kind of Union we
want and that's the kind of Union we will create."
Von der Leyen said in a statement that the EU's 450 million citizens
and its businesses need legal certainty, and her executive would use
all the powers it has under EU treaties to ensure that the bloc's
law has primacy over national law.
She said the Commission would carry out a swift analysis to decide
its next steps. Officials in Brussels said the decision could lead
to a series of fines and legal cases against Warsaw that will take
months, if not years, to play out.
(Additional reporting by Francesco Guarascio in Brussels and
Dominique Vidalon in Paris, Writing by John Chalmers, Editing by
Timothy Heritage)
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