Restitution In June 2021, Poland proposed a law to put a 10-to-30 year
statute of limitation on restitution claims, which would therefore nullify cases regarding property seized during World War II, which Israel's Foreign Minister
Yair Lapid described as “immoral and a disgrace.” Polish Prime Minister
Mateusz Morawiecki said “I can only say that as long as I am the prime minister, Poland will not pay for German crimes: Neither zloty, nor euro, nor dollar.” Lapid also said, “We are fighting for the memory of the Holocaust victims, for the pride of our people, and we won't allow any parliament to pass laws whose goal is to deny the Holocaust.” The proposed law would nevertheless also prevent people whose property was confiscated by the
Polish communist government (1944–1989) from getting their lost property restituted/compensated. Poland's President Andrzej Duda finally signed the law on 14 August. In response, Israel recalled its envoy from Poland and told the Polish ambassador not to return. Nevertheless, Poland returned its envoy to Israel in July 2022 as a sign of rapprochement in bilateral relations.
Media law In July 2021, a group of Law and Justice MPs submitted a draft of a bill on the amendment of the "Broadcasting and the Cinematography Act", which intended to prevent entities based outside the
European Economic Area from owning more than 49% of shares in Polish radio and television stations. The measure was widely seen as a step against
Discovery-owned television station
TVN, highly critical of the ruling party, which would force the American company to divest its ownership. Law and Justice denied those accusations, claiming the bill's goal was to prevent non-EU countries, such as Russia and China, from acquiring Polish media. This resulted in sacking of Agreement's leader Jarosław Gowin from the government and a political crisis. The Sejm once again voted to pass the bill with a vote of 229 to 212 with 11 abstentions, achieving an
absolute majority and overriding the Senate's veto. On December 27, amid widespread protests, President Andrzej Duda decided to veto the bill.
Social In July 2020, Minister of Justice
Zbigniew Ziobro declared he would begin preparing the formal process for Poland to withdraw from the
Istanbul Convention. He claimed the treaty is harmful because it "requires that schools teach children about
gender in an ideological way" and that it "de-emphasizes
biological sex". On July 30, Prime Minister Morawiecki motioned for the
Constitutional Tribunal to decide whether the Convention violated the
Polish Constitution. As of August 2022 the case remains undecided. In March 2021, the Ministry of Justice prepared a bill banning same-sex couples from adopting children, saying “this solution corresponds to the views of the vast majority of Polish society”. As of August 2022 the bill hasn't been put to a vote in the Sejm. In April 2022
United Poland part of the ruling government called for tougher
blasphemy laws in Poland, such as three-year jail terms for insulting church or interrupting mass. In October 2022, they submitted a
citizens' legislative initiative for the tougher blasphemy laws with close to 400,000 signatures to parliament.
Education In 2021 the
Przemysław Czarnek Education Ministry proposed a reform of the Polish educational system, dubbed in Polish media "Lex Czarnek". It has been described as controversial due to its implied criticism of the teachings on liberal issues such as
LGBT rights and
sex education. it was vetoed by the President
Andrzej Duda in 2022. ==References==