Polish President and PM Fail to Reach Agreement on EU Defence Loans as Potential Veto Looms
10 Articles
10 Articles
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk announced that President Karol Naworocki is continuing to argue through the veto of the SAFE European Plan, which will allow Poland - the main beneficiary of the programme - to obtain loans worth 44 billion euros in terms of defence investments by beginning with Polish and European armaments companies, RFI reports.
Before Tuesday's cabinet meeting, Prime Minister Donald Tusk spoke about reports that President Karol Nawrocki had decided to veto the bill implementing the EU SAFE program. He added that during the afternoon meeting at the Presidential Palace, he would ask the president directly if this was true. Prime Minister Donald Tusk sharply criticized reports that President Karol Nawrocki might veto the bill implementing the EU SAFE program. The governme…
Polish Conservative President Karol Naworocki decided to block the country's participation in the European Union's Euro-Millions Arms Programme, called the European Security Action (SAFE), writes...
In the event of President Karol Nawrocki's veto of the SAFE Act, a plan B has been prepared, said Magdalena Sobkowiak-Czarnecka, the government's plenipotentiary for the SAFE program, on Tuesday. Plan B involves injecting funds from the program into the Armed Forces Support Fund.
Tuesday in Polish politics once again turned into a duel between Prime Minister Donald Tusk and President Karol Nawrocki—this time over the SAFE issue. That day, the Prime Minister, not the President, emerged decisively victorious. It was Tusk who managed to impose the narrative of the President's "SAFE zero złoty" and of a government that, despite the Head of State's lack of cooperation, is doing everything to ensure the Polish army doesn't los…
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