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Poland reinstates Supreme Court judges following EU ruling

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Poland’s government has reinstated a number of Supreme Court judges whom it had forced into early retirement. President Andrzej Duda formalised the move on Monday meaning that a third of top judges will now be reinstated.

The government controversially lowered the retirement age for judges earlier this year, forcing many to quit, in what critics said was a political move by the ruling Law and Justice Party.

Critics said the law helped give Law and Justice (PiS) political control of the Supreme Court.The PiS has already appointed the majority of judges to the Constitutional Tribunal, which has the power to veto legislation, and also controls the body that nominates all judges in Poland.

It argued that the reforms were needed to remove judges appointed during the communist era and to make the court more efficient.

The European Court of Justice’s ruling in October was requested by the European Commission – the EU’s executive arm – which argued that the reforms undermined the rule of law because they gave the governing party political control of the judiciary.

On Monday, this decision was upheld and President Duda had until midnight to decide whether to comply.One such opponent was the head of the Supreme Court, who refused to stand down and argued that Poland’s constitution guaranteed her the right to serve a six-year term.

Chief Justice Malgorzata Gersdor, 65, branded the reforms a “purge”.
The conservative government denied the accusations, and argued that the country’s judiciary had not been properly reformed after the end of communism in 1989.

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