Poland’s disturbing tilt to the right
Poland’s disturbing tilt to the right
By: Jackson Diehl
“I´m still kind of in
shock about the recent events in Poland, a land predestined to become GREAT,
just like another curious case: Turkey, both once paradises of
multiculturalism, are paralyzed by fears, and on the verge of falling on ultra-right
wing governments.”
Erreh Svaia
Taken From:The Washington Post
Americans
have been slow to grasp that Europe’s familiar, centrist, European Union-centered
political order is endangered. Poland’s new government could deliver a wake-up
call.
It’s been
just two weeks since Beata Szydlo, a mild-mannered parliamentarian from the
right-wing Law and Justice party, was sworn in as the country’s prime minister.
During that time, the administration nominally under her control has installed
a new chief of the secret security services who was previously convicted of
abuse of power for prosecuting political opponents, replaced five members of
the Constitutional Court in order to avoid challenges to that first
appointment, and named as defense minister an outspoken anti-Semite.
The new
Polish culture minister tried to order a state-funded theater not to stage a
play by Nobel Prize-winning author Elfriede Jelinek, claiming it was
pornographic. When a television reporter questioned whether his edict was
legal, the minister promised a purge of the reporter’s network as well as other
state-supported news media. The new government spokeswoman meanwhile said she
thought it would be a good idea to put former prime minister Donald Tusk — the
current president of the European Council, the E.U.’s executive body — on
trial.
As for the
refugees now streaming toward Europe from Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan, Szydlo
has reneged on an E.U. plan under which 4,500 would be sent to Poland. Her
mentor and Law and Justice’s real leader, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, rivals Donald
Trump in his use of lies to stoke public fear of Muslims. He’s claimed that
immigrants have imposed sharia in Sweden and that they might cause epidemics
because they carry “various parasites and protozoa, which don’t affect their
organisms, but could be dangerous here.”
Such
rhetoric is having a visible effect, in the form of nasty anti-immigrant
protests. At one, on Nov. 18 in the western city of Wroclaw, an effigy of a Jew
dressed in Hasidic garb and holding the E.U. flag was burned. “Anti-Semites . .
. are under the belief that they have support from this new government for such
actions,” Poland’s Chief Rabbi, Michael Schudich, told the Jerusalem Post.
What could
explain this radical shift in a country known since 1989 for its firm embrace
of the West, burgeoning prosperity, and growing influence within the E.U.?
Partly it’s the odd post-communist politics of Poland: When voters grew tired
of the previous, center-right government, the main alternative was not the
still discredited left, but the more extreme right. But Poland’s turn is also
part of a growing popular backlash against European institutions and their
ideology of tolerance, one that extends from Greece to France.
Kaczynski,
like Hungary’s Viktor Orban, is the product of an ugly pre-World War II
populism, frozen and preserved through the communist era, that mixes
xenophobia, anti-Semitism, right-wing Catholicism and autocratic impulses.
Conspiracy theories rule: Kaczynski’s center on the death of his brother Lech,
Poland’s former president, who was killed with 95 others in a 2010 plane crash
in Russia. I nvestigations pointed to pilot and controller errors during an
ill-advised landing at a fog-bound airport.
For
Kaczynski and his crew, however, it is an article of faith that the crash was
the result of a plot involving Russia and perhaps Kaczynski’s rival, Tusk.
Hence the call that Poland’s best known and most respected active statesman be
criminally investigated. Other former government ministers fear that they may
be targeted, along with leading journalists.
Other than
Kaczinski himself, the leading proponent of the conspiracy theories is the new
defense minister, Antoni Macierewicz, who in 2002 was asked about his views of
t he Protocols of the Elders of Zion. “I am not a specialist on this, and so I
can’t resolve this,” he answered . “But experience, Polish experience,
especially in recent years, shows that there are such groups in Jewish circles
who think in a cunning way and act deliberately to the detriment of, for example,
Poland.”
If criminal
investigations of Tusk and other Kaczynski enemies go forward, a key figure in
them will likely be Mariusz Kaminski, who was installed in a new post as
coordinator of all the secret security services. In his last job as head of an
anti-corruption agency, Kaminski repeatedly tried and failed to bring criminal
charges in political cases, leading to his conviction on charges of abuse of
power. On receiving his new job, he was pardoned by the president, another
Kaczynski loyalist, in what legal experts said was a constitutional violation.
But no matter: On its fifth day in office, the government pushed through the
appointment of five new judges to the Constitutional Court, without hearings or
debate.
Liberal
Poles are calling this a creeping coup d’etat. Perhaps they are overreacting.
But the message for those who assume that leaders such as Angela Merkel and
François Hollande will forever rule Europe is: Watch Warsaw.



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