Spike31
11 Oct 2021
News / Polish constitution supersede the EU treaties and regulations [64]
Art 91. §1]
Yes, a "ratified international agreement shall constitute the part of the domestic legal order" as long as it doesn't contradict nor stand against the constitution of Poland because:
To put it simply: the constitution is the most important law and all other legal agreements are of lesser importance. Those international agreements are being respected as long as they don't defy the paragraphs of the constitution (which is a supreme law of Poland...)
For example:
Article 10, §2 states:
"executive power shall be vested in the President of the Republic of Poland and the Council of
Ministers and the judicial power shall be vested in courts and tribunals"
Poland as a member of the EU [international agreement] takes into account the EU law [as a lesser form of law than Polish constitution], however, when the EU beaurocrats are trying to usurp itself more powers that were given to them by treaties and especially to usurp the powers that are limited to Polish constitution only (which is a supreme law o Poland...) the government shall stop it and show them their place.
Did I mention that the constitution is the supreme law of Poland?
I like it. Not only I'm not against the right to protest but I'm also even more against pandemic paranoia and gathering like that helps a lot to fight it. I just don't like those lies about the number of protesters who show up.
Art 91. §1]
Yes, a "ratified international agreement shall constitute the part of the domestic legal order" as long as it doesn't contradict nor stand against the constitution of Poland because:
"The Constitution shall be the supreme law of the Republic of Poland."
To put it simply: the constitution is the most important law and all other legal agreements are of lesser importance. Those international agreements are being respected as long as they don't defy the paragraphs of the constitution (which is a supreme law of Poland...)
For example:
Article 10, §2 states:
"executive power shall be vested in the President of the Republic of Poland and the Council of
Ministers and the judicial power shall be vested in courts and tribunals"
Poland as a member of the EU [international agreement] takes into account the EU law [as a lesser form of law than Polish constitution], however, when the EU beaurocrats are trying to usurp itself more powers that were given to them by treaties and especially to usurp the powers that are limited to Polish constitution only (which is a supreme law o Poland...) the government shall stop it and show them their place.
Did I mention that the constitution is the supreme law of Poland?
And no matter how much you hate it
I like it. Not only I'm not against the right to protest but I'm also even more against pandemic paranoia and gathering like that helps a lot to fight it. I just don't like those lies about the number of protesters who show up.