Table of Contents
Why is Poland not on the euro?
Poland does not use the euro as its currency. The ruling Law and Justice Party opposes euro adoption. Former PM Donald Tusk has said that he may agree to a referendum on euro participation in order to gain their support for a constitutional amendment.
How does the EU enforce laws?
3. Who enforces it? If a member state violates the rules the commission can take that country to an EU court. If a country fails to comply with an EU court ruling — which by treaty is binding across the bloc — it can ultimately be fined.
Does Poland use dollars?
Poland has its own currency called Zloty (PLN) – marked with short zł. 1 zł is 100 groszy which is like 100 cents in 1 dollar.
What is Poland’s religion?
Roman Catholic Church
There is no official religion in Poland. The Roman Catholic Church is the biggest church in Poland. The overwhelming majority (around 87\%) of the population are Roman-Catholic if the number of the baptised is taken as the criterion (33 million of baptised people in 2013).
Is Poland’s rule of law under threat?
Having determined that the rule of law in Poland is under threat, in December EU officials triggered Article 7 of the Treaty on European Union, which refers to “a clear risk of a serious breach” of EU values. Poland has three months to address the concerns. If it does not, it could ultimately lose its EU voting rights.
What does polpoland mean for the EU?
POLAND represents a dilemma for the European Union (EU). Since coming to power in October 2015, the right-wing Law and Justice party (PiS in Polish) has been weakening the country’s democratic checks and balances. After two years of finger-wagging, the bosses in Brussels appear to have lost patience.
Will other EU countries side with or against Poland?
The onus is now on the union’s other members. France and Germany have indicated that they will side with whatever judgment is made in Brussels. Other countries are more reluctant to condemn Poland. Bulgaria, for one, hopes to avoid any vote till the end of its stint in the EU’s rotating presidency, which ends in mid-2018.
What happens if the EU fails to defend democracy in Poland?
A vote on sanctions against Poland would give the EU “sleepless nights”, points out Boyko Borisov, the Bulgarian prime minister. With PiS refusing to back down and the EU focused on Brexit, the dispute could drag on. Yet if the EU fails to defend democracy among its own members, its credibility will suffer.