Commissioner for Human Rights (Poland)
The Commissioner for Human Rights is a Polish ombudsman, an official appointed for a five year term by the Sejm with an approval of the Senate. Commissioner's responsibility is to protect civil and human rights implied by the Constitution of Poland and other legislative acts.
The post was first established in 1987 by the act of parliament and since 1997 Constitution has been in force it has become a constitutional body.
Responsibilities and powers
Polish law entrusts the ombudsman with four responsibilities with respect to citizen rights:- prevention
- diagnosis
- monitoring
- creativity
Appointment and recall
- The ombudsman is elected by an act of Sejm and has to be accepted by the Senate.
- The term of office is five years long and the same person cannot hold the office more than twice.
- Sejm has the right to recall the ombudsman with a 3/5 majority before the end of term.
The ombudsman election and status conflict 2020-2021
However, for five months, the two parliament chambers did not succeed to agree on a successor, in spite of several tries. Twice the Sejm voted down the opposition candidate, the lawyer. Once the Sejm appointed the government's candidate, Deputy Foreign Minister Piotr Wawrzyk, who however was not confirmed by the Senate.
On 15 April 2021 the Polish Constitutional Tribunal which has been controlled by the governing Law and Justice party almost since it took power in 2015, decided that Bodnar could stay in office as a temporary Ombudsman until a new one was elected, but only for a short time, and that he anyhow must vacate the office after at most three further months. The same day, the Sejm appointed government candidate Bartłomiej Wróblewski as new ombudsman, to be considered for approval by the Senate.