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Poland is pushing the EU into crisis - YouTube
Channel: Vox
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Poland is changing.
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Every year the country celebrates its national
Independence Day in the capital, Warsaw.
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There are parades and speeches
But in 2017, Poland’s Independence Day made
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worldwide news because of these signs:
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60,000 people showed up for a march led by
Nationalist and white-supremacist groups.
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That’s because they have reason to celebrate,
too.
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Poland’s right-wing political party, PiS,
is in power.
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After winning the Presidency and a majority
in Parliament, they've ignored the constitution,
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Taken over the courts, purged the military,
and cracked down on the media.
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PiS is bringing authoritarianism back to Poland
and
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openly rebelling against the European Union.
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It’s a shocking turn for a country that,
just a few years ago was hailed as one of
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Europe’s most promising young democracies.
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So, how did this happen?
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And can it be stopped?
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It was an old story to the Polish population
- conquest, subjugation, enslavement.
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it had happened before in Poland’s troubled
history but never with such inhumanity
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Poland had a traumatic 20th century.
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It was invaded twice during World War Two.
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First by the Germans and then by the Soviets...
...who re-established the country after the
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war, but as a communist state under their
control.
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In fact, Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin directly
contributed to a draft of Poland's constitution,
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which was formalized in 1952.
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These are his handwritten notes.
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For the next several decades, Poland developed
very little while it was cut off from the
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rest of the world.
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It became one of several Soviet-backed, communist
countries in Central and Eastern Europe that
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made up the Soviet bloc.
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That started to change in the 1980s.
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Polish unions started organizing huge strikes
against the communist government.
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The movement came to be called Solidarity
and it grabbed the attention of
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the world.
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In 1989, the communist government caved to
the pressure and agreed to let non-communist
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parties run in the elections.
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Solidarity and democratic candidates went
on to win the majority of parliament and the
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presidency.
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They established the Republic of Poland and
became the first country in Europe to topple
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communism.
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The rest of the Soviet bloc soon followed.
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This posed a challenge for Western Europe.
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We cannot aim at anything less than the union
of Europe as a whole and we look with confidence
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for the day that union is achieved
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Since the end of World War Two, the continent’s
democracies had been growing closer; signing
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free trade deals that became the precursor
to today’s European Union.
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At first, the trade deals just covered coal
and steel, but as they grew to include agriculture,
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energy, and other markets, more countries
joined-- making Europe more economically and
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politically integrated than it had ever been
before.
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As the former Soviet bloc countries started
establishing democracies of their own; Western
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Europe needed to find a way to include them.
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So in 1993, the established EU countries came
up with a strict checklist for admitting new
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members.
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New member-states needed to have a free market
economy, respect human rights and the rule
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of law.
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Meaning courts had to be independent and impartial--
so everyone could get a fair trial.
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These EU rules helped bring former-communist
countries in while also keeping them from
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sliding back into authoritarianism.
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They were designed to keep the peace in Europe.
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Poland joined the EU in 2004 and because of
Solidarity's success it became one of the
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most promising new member.
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Poland was given more money than any other
EU country which it used to build highways,
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schools, hospitals, and modern infrastructure.
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The country’s economy grew more than any
other ex-communist country.
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Each year after it joined, Poland received
millions of Euros to help fund highways, schools,
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hospitals, and modern infrastructure.
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By 2014, Poland became one of the EU’s strongest
and most resilient members.
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It even avoided the recession in 2009 that
crippled economies worldwide.
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Polling showed 72% of Poles were satisfied
with EU membership.
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More than any other member state.
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Minister of Foreign Affairs Radosław Sikorski:
“Ladies & Gentleman, 10 years ago we joined
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the European Union.
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We did not become part of the EU on a whim.
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We became part of the union because we put
in tremendous efforts to build a democracy
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and a free market economy; two pillars of
a united Europe.”
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And Poland’s charismatic, pro-EU Prime minister,
Donald Tusk, was chosen to become president
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of the EU’s European Council.
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But in his absence, leaders with a very different
vision for Poland's future rose to power.
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In 2015 PiS, Poland’s right-wing party,
shocked the world and won an absolute majority
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in the parliament.
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Since 2001, PiS had been led by former-Solidarity
leaders Lech and Jaroslaw Kaczynski, who felt
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that Poland’s center-left parties had become
elitist and corrupt.
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It appealed to Poland’s conservative population
in rural areas.
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PiS only earned 38% of the vote in 2015, on
par with the previous election results, but
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after Tusk left for the EU, his coalition
of center-left parties fell apart, making
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room for the right-wing party to take over.h
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According to PiS, after decades of Soviet
control, Poland was now being controlled by
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the EU.
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So when it came into power, it pledged to
take back Poland’s independence … legally
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or illegally.
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The party already controlled BOTH HOUSE OF
Parliament and the Presidency, so it initiated
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a hostile takeover of the judicial branch.
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First it packed this Constitutional court
with loyal judges and then forced out more
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than a third of the judges in this other court.
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Both acts were illegal under the Polish constitution,
but the PiS-majority parliament and Presidency
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signed them into law anyway.
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The party also fired over 11,000 civil-service
workers and at least 280 military officers,
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calling them ex-communists.
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It cracked down on the media.
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It started leveling fines on news organizations
when it didn’t like their coverage.
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Meanwhile, it’s been using Polish nationalism
to justify these moves.
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Remember this 2017 controversial march?
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A PiS politician called it “a beautiful
site”
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While the party cracked down on protests against
their authoritarian moves.
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As PiS tightened its grip on Poland, the EU
issued several warnings to stop it from breaking
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its rules….
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But PiS ignored them.
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“It is with a heavy heart that we have decided
to initiate Article 7.1”, “But the facts
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leave us with no choice.”
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In December 2017, the EU invoked Article 7--
its nuclear option-- for the first time in
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its history.
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It allows the EU to strip a member of its
voting rights if it feels it is breaking the
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criteria it established in 1993.
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// a significant number of laws have been
adopted… which put at serious risk the independence
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of the judiciary and separation of powers,
in Poland//.
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According to the EU, the PiS purging of the
courts violates the country’s commitment
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to respecting the rule of law.
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The problem for the EU is that Article 7 is
not going to work.
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The punishment requires a unanimous vote by
all EU countries -- and there is one country
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that has sworn to protect Poland...
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Hungary, another former Soviet bloc country,
has taken a turn towards authoritarianism
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under President Viktor Orban.
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And he vowed to veto any punishment against
Poland.
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So PiS continues to systematically strip…
on Poland while still receiving huge sums
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of money from the EU.
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It’s proving that a member country can stay
in the EU, reap its economic benefits, while
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ignoring its rules on rule of law.
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PiS is proving that it's possible to reap
the economic benefits of EU membership while
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flouting the rule of law.
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And that has sparked an existential crisis
for the EU...
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The rules that were written to prevent authoritarianism
from ever re-appearing in Europe, aren’t
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being followed, and there’s not much it
can do about it.
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The EU could try cutting off Poland’s funding
but it’s unclear how that would work.
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So for now, the EU remains in a crisis.
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For decades it’s tried to keep Europe democratic.
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But Poland, once the EU’s most promising
new addition, is
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Is now threatening to unravel the whole thing.
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