Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets a Warsaw and in one hundred other places throughout Poland shouting: “Let’s stay” in the European Union. The demonstrators protested against the ruling of the Constitutional Court which established the primacy of the Polish Basic Charter over Community law. Even the former leader of Solidarnosc, Lech Walesa, took the stage in the capital.
The assurances of the Polish premier Mateusz Morawiecki which denied the rumors of a possible exit of the country from the EU have not calmed the spirits. From civil rights to the independence of the judiciary, right-wing governments in Poland as well as Hungary find themselves increasingly at odds with the European Commission. The memory of Brexit raises fears of an irreversible removal of Warsaw from Brussels, in the name of national sovereignty.
Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets a Warsaw and in one hundred other places throughout Poland shouting: “Let’s stay” in the European Union. The demonstrators protested against the ruling of the Constitutional Court which established the primacy of the Polish Basic Charter over Community law. Even the former leader of Solidarnosc, Lech Walesa, took the stage in the capital.
The assurances of the Polish premier Mateusz Morawiecki which denied the rumors of a possible exit of the country from the EU have not calmed the spirits. From civil rights to the independence of the judiciary, right-wing governments in Poland as well as Hungary find themselves increasingly at odds with the European Commission. The memory of Brexit raises fears of an irreversible removal of Warsaw from Brussels, in the name of national sovereignty.
Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets a Warsaw and in one hundred other places throughout Poland shouting: “Let’s stay” in the European Union. The demonstrators protested against the ruling of the Constitutional Court which established the primacy of the Polish Basic Charter over Community law. Even the former leader of Solidarnosc, Lech Walesa, took the stage in the capital.
The assurances of the Polish premier Mateusz Morawiecki which denied the rumors of a possible exit of the country from the EU have not calmed the spirits. From civil rights to the independence of the judiciary, right-wing governments in Poland as well as Hungary find themselves increasingly at odds with the European Commission. The memory of Brexit raises fears of an irreversible removal of Warsaw from Brussels, in the name of national sovereignty.
Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets a Warsaw and in one hundred other places throughout Poland shouting: “Let’s stay” in the European Union. The demonstrators protested against the ruling of the Constitutional Court which established the primacy of the Polish Basic Charter over Community law. Even the former leader of Solidarnosc, Lech Walesa, took the stage in the capital.
The assurances of the Polish premier Mateusz Morawiecki which denied the rumors of a possible exit of the country from the EU have not calmed the spirits. From civil rights to the independence of the judiciary, right-wing governments in Poland as well as Hungary find themselves increasingly at odds with the European Commission. The memory of Brexit raises fears of an irreversible removal of Warsaw from Brussels, in the name of national sovereignty.