Case K 1/20 The Tribunal received a referral by 119 MPs on whether or not abortions of pregnancies unrelated to rape or not threatening the mother's life, which they call "eugenic", are constitutional. The signatories argued that the provision violates Constitutional protections of
human dignity (Article 30), the
right to life (Article 39) or the prohibition against discrimination (Article 32). On 22 October 2020, an 11–2 ruling declared that
abortion in Poland due to foetal abnormality was violating the Constitutional protection of human dignity. This effectively made
abortions on that basis unobtainable for women in Poland. The provision had been used for 1074 of the 1110 legal abortions in 2019. The ruling triggered the
October 2020 Polish protests, which forced the government to delay the ruling's publication in the
Dziennik Ustaw until 27 January 2021.
Case K 3/21 In July 2021,
Prime minister Mateusz Morawiecki asked the Tribunal for a
constitutional review of three provisions of
Treaty on European Union. Following a series of hearings of prominent officeholders, the Tribunal ruled on 7 October 2021 in a 12–2 decision that: • Article 1 of the
Treaty on European Union (establishing an "ever closer union"), insofar as it is interpreted by the
European Court of Justice in a "new step" (
nowy etap) which • enlarges the EU institutions' competence beyond the limits that Poland accepted via its treaties, • opposes the primacy of the
Constitution of Poland in both validity and application, • opposes the sovereignty of the Polish state, • : is unconstitutional; • Article 19 of the
Treaty on European Union (that establishes the ECJ), insofar as it gives ordinary courts the right to disregard the Constitution, and to adjudicate on the basis of provisions repealed by the Sejm or deemed unconstitutional by the TK, is unconstitutional; • Article 19 and Article 2 of the
Treaty on European Union (values) are unconstitutional insofar as they empower ordinary courts to question the constitutionality of judicial appointments by the President. Consequently, all branches of power in Poland argue that Poland's membership in the European Union does not entail that institutions external to the state have the supreme legal authority. This was widely interpreted as a challenge of the
primacy of European Union law, which emerged in
Costa v. ENEL (1964), with some talking of a judicial "
Polexit". European primacy, however, had never been fully enshrined by previous Polish rulings, only insofar as it doesn't infringe on Poland's sovereignty (see K 18/04). This landmark decision marks the culmination of the
escalade over judicial nominations and reforms between Brussels and Warsaw that began in late 2015, when
Law and Justice came to power, starting with the
2015 Polish Constitutional Court crisis. Many politicians in Brussels called upon the
European Commission to freeze payments to Poland. The Commission President said she was deeply concerned, and ordered to act swiftly. The recently implemented
Rule of Law Conditionality Regulation could be used. == Presidents and vice presidents ==