GOOD FOR POLAND: Polish High Court Rules National Sovereignty Supersedes EU Authority, EU Sues

Discussion in 'Western Europe' started by Zorro, Feb 21, 2023.

  1. Zorro

    Zorro Well-Known Member

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    GOOD FOR POLAND: Polish High Court Rules National Sovereignty Supersedes EU Authority, EU Sues

    A FREE and INDEPENDENT Nation!

    [​IMG]

    'The globalist neoleft project to undermine national sovereignty and roll nation-states into first regional, then global, political blocks has encountered significant backlash, particularly in the context of the EU from Eastern bloc member states — Poland and Hungary chief among them.'

    The only legitimate source of power is that conferred by the consent of The People. It looks like these EU ass hats do not have the consent of some of these nations they claim to control.

    'The EU complains that where contradictions exist between the EU treaties and the Polish constitution, that the constitution should bow before the EU.

    Poland only joined the EU in 2004, and has centuries of existence as a nation state.

    I doubt that the EU is in a position to force the national surrender of the Polish People.

    The EU claims that Poland's high court is invalid because they do not approve of how 3 Justices were selected, 8 years ago, or how the President was selected, 7 years ago.

    Poland has told them to pound sand, reminding them that when it comes to the Free People of Poland that 'Article 190(1) of Poland’s constitution reads: “Judgments of the Constitutional Tribunal are universally binding and are final.” The European court does NOT overrule the 'judgments of the Constitutional Tribunal of the sovereign Polish state.”

    Please discuss how it is that these Left Wing Totalitarian Ass hats have convinced themselves that they can arrogate power from These Free People who rule themselves?
     
    Last edited: Feb 21, 2023
    modernpaladin likes this.
  2. kazenatsu

    kazenatsu Well-Known Member Past Donor

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    It looks like there have turned out to be some minor (but nevertheless very significant) structural legal differences between Poland's laws and E.U. treaty.
    I wonder if these differences had existed at the beginning, or only came to exist later when the E.U. commission changed the rules.

    Law can be such a complicated thing, it really shouldn't be that surprising there some compatibility problems.

    The way E.U. law is set up, if leaders or even bureaucrats on the E.U. side make a change to the rules, there could be unforeseen legal compatibility complications with member states. The two sides might have been compatible before but then become incompatible after a rule change.

    Apparently the issue is that Poland has a Disciplinary Chamber that can discipline the country's Supreme Court, and the E.U. sees this as a violation of judicial independence. This involves two competing concepts, accountability to the parliament and ultimately the people, but also separation of powers and trying to safeguard justice by insulating judges from political pressures.

    European Commission refers Poland to the Court of Justice (europa.eu)
     
    Last edited: Feb 22, 2023

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