Polish president signs laws that led to EU sanction threat
WARSAW, Poland — Poland’s president signed two laws Wednesday that complete a sweeping government overhaul of the country’s justice system, ignoring a warning from the European Union that the legislation breached fundamental democratic principles and could lead to unprecedented sanctions.
President Andrzej Duda’s approval of the laws he had a hand in drafting was not unexpected, but his announcement came hours after the EU’s executive body triggered proceedings over a series of legal changes that give the Polish government more control over the judiciary and courts.
Duda emphatically defended the legislation in a television interview on Wednesday night. He accused the EU of hypocrisy” and some of its leaders of “lying” with the suggestion that Poland is acting with disregard for basic European values.
The developments reflect a dramatic historical reversal for Poland, the birthplace of an anti-communist movement in the 1980s that inspired people across Eastern Europe and has been held up as a model of democratic transition for more than a quarter century.