Zbigniew Tadeusz Ziobro (born 18 August 1970) is a Polish politician and lawyer who served as Minister of Justice and Prosecutor General from November 2005 to September 2007 and from November 2015 to December 2023.[1][2] As a prominent conservative figure aligned with the Law and Justice (PiS) movement, he founded and leads the Sovereign Poland party, a Catholic-nationalist group established in 2012 after splitting from PiS over policy disagreements.[3]
During his second tenure as justice minister, Ziobro spearheaded judicial reforms that restructured court administration, lowered the retirement age for judges to facilitate turnover, and reformed disciplinary procedures to address perceived inefficiencies and lingering post-communist influences in the judiciary, measures that improved case resolution times but provoked EU infringement proceedings and funding freezes on grounds of eroding judicial independence.[4][5][6] His policies emphasized prosecutorial independence from political interference, rigorous anti-corruption drives, and resistance to supranational oversight, positioning him as a defender of Polish sovereignty against what he described as ideologically driven EU interventions.[7]
Ziobro's career has been defined by confrontations with liberal opposition and international bodies, including allegations of authorizing Pegasus spyware for surveillance operations justified as countering threats but later scrutinized in parliamentary probes following the 2023 change in government, leading to his compelled testimony and brief detentions in 2025 amid claims of political retribution by critics and denials of impropriety by supporters.[8][9][10]
Early Life and Education
Family Background and Upbringing
Zbigniew Ziobro was born on August 18, 1970, in Kraków, Poland.[11] He spent his childhood in Krynica-Zdrój, a spa town in southern Poland.[11]Ziobro is the son of Jerzy Ziobro, a physician who served as a hospital director, and Krystyna (née Kornicka), a dentist.[11] His family background reflects a professional orientation toward medicine, though Ziobro pursued legal studies.[11] He has a brother named Witold.[12]
Legal Education and Early Influences
Zbigniew Ziobro earned a magister degree in law from the Faculty of Law and Administration at Jagiellonian University in Kraków in 1994.[13][14] His studies occurred during the early post-communist transition in Poland, a period marked by efforts to reform the legal system inherited from the communist era, though specific details on his academic performance or coursework focus remain limited in available records. Ziobro later enrolled in a doctoral program but did not complete it.Contemporary accounts describe Ziobro's university years in the 1990s as challenging academically, with reports of repeated exam failures and a reputation for prioritizing social activities over studies.[15] Following graduation, he underwent training to qualify as a prosecutor but did not enter prosecutorial practice at that time, instead shifting toward political engagement in conservative circles amid Poland's evolving democratic institutions.[15]Early influences on Ziobro's legal worldview appear tied to the broader context of Poland's judicial overhaul after 1989, fostering a emphasis on strengthening prosecutorial authority and combating perceived remnants of communist-era leniency in the justice system, though he has not publicly detailed personal mentors from this phase. His initial disinterest in routine legal practice foreshadowed a career prioritizing systemic reform over individual cases, aligning with the nationalist-conservative ideology that later defined his political roles.[15]
Professional Career Before Politics
Legal Practice and Prosecutorial Roles
Zbigniew Ziobro graduated from the Faculty of Law and Administration at Jagiellonian University in Kraków in 1994.[16][15] Following his studies, he completed a prosecutorial apprenticeship (aplikacja prokuratorska) at the District Prosecutor's Office in Katowice. In 1997, he passed the state prosecutorial examination, which qualified him to serve as a prosecutor or prosecutor trainee (asesor prokuratury). [17]Despite obtaining these credentials, Ziobro did not enter active prosecutorial service or undertake private legal practice. No records indicate employment in a law firm, court, or ongoing prosecutorial capacity between 1997 and his entry into national politics in 2001 as a Sejm deputy. His pre-political professional engagement appears confined to the apprenticeship phase, after which he shifted focus to political organizing, including co-founding the Law and Justice (PiS) party. This transition meant his legal expertise derived primarily from academic training and qualifying examinations rather than courtroom or investigative experience.
Political Rise
Involvement with Law and Justice Party
Zbigniew Ziobro co-founded the Law and Justice Party (PiS) in 2001, contributing to its establishment as a national-conservative force focused on combating post-communist corruption and restoring institutional integrity in Poland.[18] Within the party, he ascended to the position of deputy chairman, advocating for stringent anti-corruption measures and judicial accountability aligned with PiS's core platform.[19]By 2011, internal tensions escalated as Ziobro criticized PiS leadership under Jarosław Kaczyński for insufficient modernization and overly centralized control, prompting calls for internal democratization and strategic shifts to broaden electoral appeal.[19] On November 4, 2011, Ziobro, along with allies including MEPs Jacek Kurski and Tadeusz Cymański, was expelled from PiS for disloyalty and attempting to fracture the party.[20] This schism reflected broader factional divides within PiS between hardline reformers and those favoring Kaczyński's consolidated authority.Following his expulsion, Ziobro established Suwerenna Polska (Sovereign Poland, initially known as Solidarna Polska) on March 24, 2012, positioning it as a more uncompromising conservative alternative emphasizing sovereignty, traditional values, and aggressive anti-corruption policies.[21] Despite the split, Suwerenna Polska entered electoral alliances with PiS under the United Right banner starting in the 2015 parliamentary elections, functioning as a junior coalition partner that amplified PiS's judicial reform agenda while maintaining distinct influence on prosecutorial and legal matters.[22] This partnership endured through subsequent governments until PiS's loss of power in 2023, with Ziobro leveraging his party's leverage to push for policies targeting perceived post-communist remnants in the judiciary.[23]
Initial Electoral Successes
Zbigniew Ziobro secured his entry into national politics through the Polish parliamentary election held on 23 September 2001, winning a seat in the Sejm for the fourth term (2001–2005).[24][25] Representing the newly formed Law and Justice (PiS) party, which garnered approximately 9.5% of the national vote and 44 seats in the 460-member chamber, Ziobro's success reflected the party's appeal to voters seeking a conservative alternative amid post-communist transition challenges.[26]His electoral debut positioned him as an active participant in early PiS parliamentary efforts, including debates on anti-corruption measures that aligned with the party's platform against entrenched elites. Ziobro's visibility grew through committee work and public advocacy, laying groundwork for his rapid ascent within PiS ranks. This initial mandate ended with the 2005 elections, where PiS expanded significantly, but the 2001 victory established Ziobro as a key figure in the party's foundational parliamentary presence.[27]
Parliamentary and Governmental Roles
Membership in Sejm
Zbigniew Ziobro first entered the Sejm as a member of the 4th term (2001–2005), elected in the parliamentary elections of 23 September 2001 from the Kraków constituency on the Law and Justice (PiS) list.[28] He was reelected to the 5th term (2005–2007) in the 25 September 2005 elections, again from Kraków, securing one of 460 seats as part of PiS's plurality.[28] During this period, he served on committees including the Justice and Human Rights Committee, contributing to legislative efforts on criminal justice reforms.[29]In the 6th term (2007–2011), Ziobro was reelected on 21 October 2007 from the same constituency, maintaining his seat until 14 July 2009, when he resigned following election to the European Parliament in the 7 June 2009 vote, where he topped the PiS list in Lesser Poland with 335,933 votes.[30] His Sejm tenure in this term included active participation in justice-related debates amid PiS's opposition status post-2007 government change.[28]Returning to national politics, Ziobro was elected to the 8th term (2015–2019) in the 25 October 2015 elections from the Rzeszów constituency as leader of the United Right coalition list, which won a majority; he retained the seat through PiS's governance period.[28] He continued in the 9th term (2019–2023), elected on 13 October 2019 from the same area, focusing on parliamentary oversight of his concurrent ministerial duties.[31]Ziobro secured reelection to the 10th term (2023–2027) in the 15 October 2023 parliamentary elections from constituency no. 13 (Kraków), receiving a mandate as part of PiS's opposition bloc after the coalition's defeat; he has remained an active member, participating in over 90% of votes as of mid-2025.[32][28] Throughout his Sejm career, spanning six nonconsecutive terms totaling over 15 years, Ziobro has aligned with conservative judicial policy advocacy, though his ministerial roles from 2005–2007 and 2015–2023 often intertwined with legislative functions under Polish constitutional allowances for dual office-holding.[28]
First Tenure as Minister of Justice (2005–2007)
Zbigniew Ziobro served as Minister of Justice from 31 October 2005 to 16 November 2007, during the Law and Justice (PiS)-led governments under Prime Ministers Kazimierz Marcinkiewicz and Jarosław Kaczyński.[13] His tenure emphasized combating corruption inherited from post-communist structures, aligning with PiS's broader agenda to dismantle entrenched networks in politics, judiciary, and business. Ziobro prioritized prosecutorial actions against high-profile figures from previous administrations, including investigations into bribery and abuse of power, which garnered public support for their visibility but drew accusations of selective enforcement from opponents.[23]A cornerstone initiative was the creation of the Central Anti-Corruption Bureau (CBA), enacted by the Sejm on 9 June 2006 and operational from 24 July 2006.[33] The CBA was tasked with preventing and investigating corruption in public administration, state-owned enterprises, and local government, filling a gap left by prior agencies lacking dedicated anti-corruption mandate. Under Ziobro's oversight, the bureau conducted coordinated operations with prosecutorial input, focusing on economic crimes and political graft, such as land rezoning scandals involving bribes for commercial development approvals.[34] This measure responded to scandals like the Rywin affair and aimed to enhance transparency, though critics later questioned its independence due to direct governmental ties.[35]Ziobro's prosecutorial strategy included public arrests and media-covered raids to deter corruption, targeting figures linked to the prior Social Democracy of Poland (SLD) government. A pivotal case unfolded in July 2007, when the CBA executed a sting operation against Deputy Prime MinisterAndrzej Lepper of the Self-Defense party, alleging bribery in land designation deals. On 5 July 2007, Ziobro briefed Interior Minister Janusz Kaczmarek on the impending action, which led to Lepper's dismissal on 9 July and the coalition's collapse, precipitating early parliamentary elections in October 2007.[36][37] The operation exemplified Ziobro's aggressive approach but fueled debates over political motivation, with leaked details exacerbating internal government tensions and contributing to PiS's electoral setback.[23]
Extended Ministerial Leadership
Second Tenure as Minister of Justice (2015–2023)
Zbigniew Ziobro assumed the role of Minister of Justice on November 16, 2015, shortly after the Law and Justice (PiS) party secured a parliamentary majority in the October 25 elections, enabling the implementation of its judicial reform agenda. During this period, his ministry enacted over 80 laws targeting systemic inefficiencies, corruption, and victim support mechanisms. Key initiatives included enhanced prosecutions against value-added tax (VAT) fraud networks, which Ziobro described as dismantling organized "VAT mafias" through asset seizures and stricter penalties, contrasting with pre-2015 enforcement levels that he claimed were over 20 times lower in effectiveness.[38]The tenure emphasized family and child protection reforms, such as prohibiting child removals solely due to parental poverty, establishing a national pedophile registry, and imposing harsher sentences for sexual offenses against minors. Alimony enforcement was strengthened via automated deductions and penalties for non-payment, while illegal adoptions and usury practices faced new restrictions. Economic safeguards included consumer bankruptcy provisions during the COVID-19 pandemic and anti-usury legislation to curb predatory lending. In the correctional system, programs expanded prisoner employment, electronic monitoring, and juvenile rehabilitation alternatives to incarceration.[38]Digitization efforts modernized court operations, including electronic land registers and the National Court Register (KRS), positioning Poland among top EU performers in judicial digital infrastructure by the 2023 EU Justice Scoreboard. Additional measures addressed bailiff overreach, wild reprivatization of properties, odometer tampering in vehicles, and expanded self-defense rights. The Justice Fund, under ministry oversight, allocated resources for crime victims, though its administration later faced scrutiny. In November 2021, Ziobro proposed restructuring courts into fewer, larger units—79 district and 20 regional courts—to reduce bureaucracy and allow judges to prioritize case resolutions over administrative duties.[38][4] Ziobro's leadership endured political challenges, including surviving a parliamentary no-confidence vote on December 13, 2022, by a narrow margin that preserved the ruling coalition. His term concluded on November 27, 2023, following PiS's electoral defeat.[39]
Role as Prosecutor General (2016–2023)
Zbigniew Ziobro assumed the role of Prosecutor General on 4 March 2016, concurrently serving as Minister of Justice, following an amendment to the Public Prosecutor's Office Act passed on 28 January 2016.[40][41] This legislation abolished the independent National Public Prosecutor's Office, which had previously acted as a buffer between regional prosecutors and the Prosecutor General, subordinating all approximately 6,000 prosecutors directly to Ziobro's authority.[42] The reform centralized decision-making, allowing the Prosecutor General to issue binding instructions on specific cases, appoint and dismiss prosecutors at all levels, and reassign personnel, which proponents argued enhanced operational efficiency and accountability in addressing stalled investigations from prior administrations.[41]Under Ziobro's leadership, the National Public Prosecutor's Office, reestablished as a subordinate unit, focused on high-volume criminal prosecutions, including anti-corruption efforts coordinated with the Central Anticorruption Bureau (CBA). Key actions included demoting or reassigning prosecutors perceived as obstructive, such as the 2016 transfer of deputy prosecutor Dariusz Korneluk to a district office amid disciplinary proceedings, enabling resumption of dormant cases against political figures from the previous Civic Platform government.[43] The office pursued investigations into alleged abuses involving public funds, with reports indicating activation of around 600 politically sensitive cases by 2023, though exact conviction rates remain disputed due to ongoing trials.[44]Ziobro's tenure emphasized prosecutorial discipline through mechanisms like secondments and performance evaluations, which facilitated handling of complex cases such as organized crime and financial misconduct, but also drew accusations of top-down control from human rights organizations aligned with opposition views.[45] By 2023, when his positions ended with the change in government on 27 November, the restructured service had processed thousands of indictments annually, contributing to Poland's reported improvements in certain judicial backlog metrics, though source credibility on outcomes varies given institutional biases in post-2015 reporting.
Judicial Reform Agenda
Motivations Rooted in Post-Communist Legacy
Ziobro's push for judicial reforms stems from the incomplete de-communization of Poland's judiciary following the 1989 fall of communism, where approximately 10,000 judges—many appointed under the Polish People's Republic—continued serving without rigorous vetting, perpetuating influences from an era of political interference and ideological conformity.[46][47] This legacy, in his view, fostered a self-perpetuating "caste" resistant to accountability, evidenced by low public trust ratings (around 40% in 2015 polls) and persistent case backlogs exceeding 1 million unresolved matters.[48][49]As Minister of Justice from 2015, Ziobro articulated that reforms were necessary to excise post-communist elements, arguing the system harbored judges who had enforced regime repression, such as those involved in 1980s trials of Solidarity activists.[50][46] He supported initiatives like the 2017 law lowering the retirement age for Supreme Court judges from 70 to 65, which retired over 20 individuals, many with pre-1989 careers, to enable replacement by those untainted by the old order.[51] This measure aligned with broader PiS goals of lustration-like renewal, absent in earlier post-communist governments, to align the judiciary with the Third Republic's constitutional foundations rather than Soviet-imposed structures.[52]In 2019, under Ziobro's oversight, Polish prosecutors pursued cases against seven communist-era judges and prosecutors for imprisoning pro-democracy figures, underscoring his emphasis on retrospective justice to dismantle lingering authoritarian mentalities.[46] Ziobro rejected external critiques, such as EU rulings deeming disciplinary bodies politicized, as ideologically driven interference that ignored Poland's unique historical burdens, prioritizing national sovereignty over supranational standards.[7][53] These motivations reflect a causal understanding that unaddressed communist residues undermine judicial impartiality, as seen in documented instances of pre-1989 judges issuing politically biased rulings post-transition.[54]Critics, including EU institutions, contend the post-communist rationale serves as pretext for executive control, noting that newer appointees also faced scrutiny for insufficient ideological vetting.[52][55] However, empirical patterns of judicial inertia—such as resistance to anti-corruption probes involving post-communist networks—lend credence to Ziobro's diagnosis of systemic entrenchment requiring structural intervention.[49]
Core Reforms: Lowering Judge Retirement Age and Disciplinary Mechanisms
In July 2017, the Polish Sejm passed legislation lowering the mandatory retirement age for judges in common courts from 67 to 65 for men and 60 for women, applied retroactively, which compelled approximately one-third of sitting judges to retire unless granted an extension by the Minister of Justice, Zbigniew Ziobro.[56][57] This reform, drafted under Ziobro's Ministry of Justice, empowered him to selectively prolong judicial mandates, ostensibly to enhance judicial efficiency and replace personnel perceived as remnants of the communist-era system with younger, more accountable professionals.[58][59]A parallel measure targeted Supreme Court justices, reducing their retirement age from 70 to 65 via a law enacted in July 2018, which immediately affected 27 of the 72 sitting judges by mandating their retirement absent presidential authorization for continuation.[60][61] Ziobro defended the changes as essential for purging outdated influences and aligning the judiciary with contemporary standards of accountability, arguing that prolonged tenures insulated judges from performance oversight.[62] The European Court of Justice later invalidated the common courts' provision in November 2019, deeming it discriminatory and an infringement on judicial independence under EU law, prompting partial reversals.[63][64]Complementing these changes, Ziobro's ministry introduced enhanced disciplinary mechanisms in 2017–2019, establishing a specialized disciplinary regime for judges that included the creation of a Disciplinary Chamber within the Supreme Court to adjudicate misconduct cases.[65][66] Under this framework, Ziobro, as Minister, gained authority to appoint key personnel involved in investigations and proceedings, enabling sanctions for behaviors such as public criticism of reforms or rulings on judicial legitimacy, with penalties ranging from reprimands to dismissal.[5][67] Proponents, including Ziobro, contended that prior mechanisms lacked teeth to address judicial overreach or inefficiency, citing empirical backlogs and low conviction rates in corruption cases as evidence necessitating stricter oversight.[53] The EU's Court of Justice ruled in 2021 and 2023 that elements of this system violated bloc standards by lacking impartiality, as the chamber's composition was influenced by politically appointed bodies.[6][53]
Policy Achievements
Anti-Corruption Prosecutions and Institutional Changes
During his second tenure as Minister of Justice from 2015 to 2023, Zbigniew Ziobro oversaw institutional reforms aimed at bolstering the prosecution's capacity to address entrenched corruption, particularly networks linked to the post-communist era. A key change enacted via the November 2016 amendment to the Act on the Public Prosecutor's Office merged the roles of Minister of Justice and Prosecutor General, positions held concurrently by Ziobro starting that year. Proponents, including PiS officials, argued this centralization dismantled barriers posed by the 2010 separation of roles under the previous Civic Platform government, which had allegedly enabled local prosecutors—often influenced by political or elite ties—to stall investigations into high-level graft.[68][69]The reform also established the National Public Prosecutor's Office (Prokuratura Krajowa), a new centralized body subordinate to the Prosecutor General, tasked with overseeing complex cases involving organized crime, terrorism, and corruption previously handled by regional offices. This structure facilitated the transfer of over 100 major investigations, including those related to bribery and abuse of power among officials and business figures, by deploying specialized prosecutors less susceptible to local pressures. The Department for Organized Crime and Corruption within the National Public Prosecutor's Office prioritized such matters, contributing to indictments in cases like the 2020 probe into cross-border bribery involving Latvian politician Aivars Lembergs and Polish intermediaries.[70][71]These changes enabled aggressive anti-corruption drives, including the use of surveillance tools like Pegasus spyware to gather evidence in probes against suspected high-level offenders, such as former Civic Platform-affiliated figures Roman Giertych (charged with money laundering) and Michał Nowak (accused of leading a criminal organization). Ziobro's office reported that such efforts exposed large-scale schemes, including one of Poland's most significant corruption networks spanning politics and business, though exact conviction statistics remain contested amid post-2023 reviews by the new government. Critics from opposition and EU bodies contend the centralization politicized prosecutions, but empirical outcomes included convictions of several pre-PiS era officials for graft, aligning with PiS claims of breaking post-communist impunity.[72][71][9]
Enhancements in Judicial Efficiency and Case Backlogs
During Zbigniew Ziobro's second tenure as Minister of Justice from 2015 to 2023, the Polish Ministry of Justice pursued several initiatives to address longstanding issues with judicial efficiency and case backlogs inherited from the post-communist era, including the recruitment of additional judges and procedural simplifications. The government appointed approximately 3,250 new judges between 2018 and 2023 through the National Council of the Judiciary, expanding the judiciary's capacity to handle caseloads amid persistent backlogs estimated at over 1 million pending cases in common courts as of 2015.[73] These appointments were intended to accelerate case resolutions by increasing judicial manpower, with proponents arguing that prior shortages—stemming from limited recruitment under previous administrations—had exacerbated delays.[4]Procedural reforms included the expansion of mediation programs, which saw the number of cases resolved through this method rise by 114% from 2015 to 2022, reaching a record high and reducing court burdens for amenable disputes.[74] The ministry also increased the number of dedicated family court divisions from 106 in 2015 to 408 by 2023, facilitating faster processing of family-related matters, which constitute a significant portion of civil backlogs.[74] In 2021, Ziobro announced a restructuring plan to relieve judges of administrative duties, allowing an estimated 2,100 judges to prioritize adjudications over managerial tasks, thereby targeting inefficiencies in court operations.[4]Despite these efforts, empirical data indicated mixed outcomes on overall backlogs and disposition times. Ministry statistics revealed that average civil case processing times lengthened from 10.3 months in 2015 to 14.8 months in 2020, a 44% increase, while the Supreme Audit Office (NIK) reported in 2024 that upheld complaints about procedural delays rose from 11.2% to 19.2% between 2018 and 2023, attributing this partly to reform-induced disruptions rather than resolved inefficiencies.[75] Ziobro maintained that progress was evident, citing higher case throughput in select areas, though independent analyses, including those from the European Commission, documented no net reduction in systemic backlogs during the period.[76][77]
Controversies and Opposing Perspectives
Domestic Criticisms of Judicial Politicization
Domestic critics, primarily from opposition parties such as Civic Platform, judges' associations like Iustitia, and civil society organizations, contended that Ziobro's judicial reforms enabled undue political influence over court operations and personnel decisions. They argued that measures like the 2017 lowering of the Supreme Court retirement age from 70 to 65, which forced out 27 judges including First President Małgorzata Gersdorf, served to replace incumbents with government-aligned appointees rather than addressing inefficiencies.[5] Similarly, the 2018 creation of the Extraordinary Control and Public Affairs Chamber within the Supreme Court was decried as a mechanism to legitimize politically motivated rulings, with critics highlighting its role in validating elections and dismissing complaints against PiS-favored outcomes.[65]A focal point of contention was the disciplinary regime for judges, established under Ziobro's 2017-2019 laws, which opponents claimed was weaponized to silence dissent. The regime, overseen by a new Disciplinary Chamber staffed by judges selected via a politicized process involving the National Council of the Judiciary reformed in 2017 to include parliamentary appointees, resulted in over 3,000 proceedings against judges by 2022, disproportionately targeting those who invalidated government actions or criticized reforms.[78] Prominent judge Igor Tuleya, sanctioned for public statements against the changes, described the process as "harassing [judges] into obedience," exemplifying claims of intimidation to enforce loyalty.[5] Opposition figures, including former Prime Minister Donald Tusk, accused Ziobro of using this system to shield PiS allies from accountability while pursuing selective cases against critics.[79]Ziobro's dual role as Minister of Justice and Prosecutor General from 2016 onward intensified allegations of prosecutorial politicization, with critics documenting the replacement of nearly all regional prosecutorial heads and dismissal of around 1,000 prosecutors—about 16% of the total—often those resisting instructions in high-profile cases.[5] Public sentiment reflected these views, as a 2021 CBOS poll found 66% of Poles disapproving of the government's judicial policies, rising to over 90% believing courts had not improved by 2023 per United Surveys data.[79][48] Even within the ruling coalition, Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki in May 2023 conceded the reforms "haven't turned out well," implicitly faulting Ziobro's implementation for eroding public trust without delivering promised efficiency gains.[55] These domestic critiques, echoed in street protests by thousands of judges and lawyers since 2017, portrayed the changes as a shift from post-communist cleanup to executive capture, though PiS defenders maintained they countered entrenched judicial privileges.[5]
European Union Conflicts and Sovereignty Disputes
Zbigniew Ziobro's implementation of judicial reforms during his second tenure as Poland's Minister of Justice from 2015 to 2023 precipitated major conflicts with the European Union, centered on accusations that the changes undermined judicial independence and the rule of law. The European Commission launched multiple infringement proceedings against Poland, arguing that measures such as lowering the retirement age for Supreme Court judges and establishing a disciplinary regime for judicial misconduct violated EU treaties. These tensions escalated with the activation of Article 7 of the Treaty on European Union in December 2017 by the European Parliament, which assessed a clear risk of serious breach of EU values by Poland due to systemic threats to judicial autonomy.[80]The Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) issued several adverse rulings, including on November 16, 2021, declaring that Polish laws permitting the justice minister to assign and remove judges from higher criminal courts infringed EU law on effective judicial protection. Similarly, a June 5, 2023, CJEU decision invalidated aspects of a 2019 reform aimed at addressing prior EU criticisms, fining Poland for non-compliance and reinforcing the suspension of structural funds. In response, Ziobro dismissed the CJEU as "corrupt" and accused it of exceeding its mandate, asserting that the rulings violated European treaties by encroaching on national competencies. He highlighted perceived double standards, noting that similar political influences existed in other member states' judiciaries without equivalent scrutiny.[81][6][82]Ziobro framed the EU's interventions as an assault on Polish sovereignty, warning in February 2022 that mechanisms like the rule-of-law conditionality regulation endangered national freedom and democracy through economic blackmail, vowing resistance to preserve Poland's independence. In an August 2021 interview, he stated that Poland should not remain in the EU "at any cost" if membership required submission to supranational dictates over core internal affairs. These positions aligned with the Polish government's broader defense that reforms were essential to purge lingering post-communist influences from the judiciary, a motivation often downplayed in EU critiques that prioritized uniform standards over national historical contexts. The disputes resulted in the EU withholding approximately €35 billion in recovery and cohesion funds from Poland until judicial compliance was demonstrated, though partial disbursements resumed post-2023 government change.[83][84][85]Critics within EU institutions, including the Commission, portrayed Ziobro's reforms as politicizing the judiciary to consolidate power, yet Polish officials countered that EU pressures reflected ideological bias against conservative governance models, with supranational courts overriding democratically elected parliaments. Ziobro's advocacy for sovereignty extended to challenging EU primacy in areas like energy policy, where a June 2025 Polish Constitutional Tribunal ruling—echoing his prior stances—deemed certain EU climate regulations unconstitutional for infringing national competencies, though this post-dated his ministerial role. These clashes underscored a fundamental rift between EU integrationist ambitions and Poland's insistence on subsidiarity, with Ziobro emerging as a vocal defender of the latter.[86]
Post-2023 Investigations and Allegations of Political Persecution
Following the October 15, 2023, parliamentary elections in which the Law and Justice (PiS) party lost power to a coalition led by Donald Tusk's Civic Platform, Polish prosecutors and parliamentary commissions initiated multiple investigations targeting Zbigniew Ziobro, who had served as Minister of Justice and Prosecutor General from 2015 to 2023. These probes primarily focused on alleged misuse of public funds and authorization of surveillance tools during PiS governance, including the purchase and deployment of Pegasus spyware against opposition figures such as lawyer Roman Giertych and former European Parliament member Michał Nowak. On February 19, 2024, the Sejm established a special commission to examine the PiS government's use of Pegasus between 2015 and 2023, identifying Ziobro as a central figure due to his oversight of the Central Anticorruption Bureau (CBA) and justice ministry budgets that funded such acquisitions.[87]A parallel criminal investigation into the Justice Fund—a 1.6 billion złoty (approximately €380 million) pool managed under Ziobro's ministry for victim compensation and court infrastructure—alleged embezzlement and favoritism toward PiS allies, resulting in charges against seven individuals, including former ministry officials, on March 27, 2024. Prosecutors claimed funds were diverted for non-judicial purposes, such as purchasing surveillance equipment without proper oversight, with searches conducted at homes of ex-officials linked to Ziobro. Ziobro has denied wrongdoing, asserting that expenditures enhanced judicial efficiency and anti-corruption efforts against entrenched networks from Poland's post-communist era. Additional probes emerged in 2025, including a March 17 investigation by the Lublin District Prosecutor's Office into abuse of power by CBA officers under his influence.[88][89]Ziobro and PiS lawmakers have characterized these actions as politically motivated persecution orchestrated by the Tusk administration to neutralize opposition ahead of the 2025 presidential election, citing a July 2024 Constitutional Tribunal ruling that deemed the Pegasus commission unconstitutional for infringing on prosecutorial independence. Ziobro ignored four summonses to the commission in 2024, invoking health issues related to cancer treatment, prompting a December 6, 2024, Sejm vote to authorize police enforcement. On January 31, 2025, police attempted to detain him for questioning but initially failed; the commission requested 30 days of pre-trial detention, which was not granted. He was forcibly escorted from a plane at Warsaw Chopin Airport on September 30, 2025, to testify, during which he admitted authorizing Pegasus purchases but maintained their legality for national security probes into corruption suspects with ties to foreign influences.[90][10][9]Supporters of the investigations, including Tusk government officials, argue they represent accountability for systemic abuses, pointing to documented Pegasus infections on over 100 targets, including journalists and politicians, as evidence of overreach beyond legitimate law enforcement. Critics within PiS, however, highlight selective enforcement—sparing coalition figures from similar past scrutiny—and parallels to pre-2015 politicized prosecutions under PO-PSL governments, suggesting a pattern of retribution rather than impartial justice. Ziobro's defiance has galvanized conservative voters, framing the probes as an assault on sovereignty against EU-aligned pressures, with no convictions secured against him as of October 2025.[87][91]
Leadership of Sovereign Poland
Formation and Separation from PiS Mainstream
Zbigniew Ziobro, a prominent figure in Polish conservative politics and former vice president of the Law and Justice (PiS) party, faced expulsion from PiS in 2011 after publicly criticizing the party's internal management and leadership under Jarosław Kaczyński.[19] This rift stemmed from disagreements over the direction of PiS, with Ziobro advocating for a harder line on issues such as judicial reforms and national sovereignty, viewing the mainstream leadership as insufficiently resolute.[19]In September 2012, Ziobro and a group of like-minded PiS defectors formally established Sovereign Poland (Suwerenna Polska) as an independent political entity, marking a explicit break from PiS's broader coalition-oriented approach.[92] The formation positioned Sovereign Poland as a vehicle for advancing more uncompromising conservative policies, particularly in justice and anti-corruption efforts, without the compromises Ziobro associated with PiS mainstream.[92] Initial membership included several former PiS parliamentarians, reflecting factional tensions within the right-wing spectrum over ideological purity versus electoral pragmatism.Although the split created a separate party structure, Sovereign Poland quickly realigned politically with PiS, entering electoral alliances by 2014 wherein its candidates competed on joint lists to consolidate the right-wing vote.[21] This pragmatic cooperation persisted through the 2015–2023 United Right government, where Ziobro served as Minister of Justice, yet underlying divergences—evident in periodic coalition frictions over reform pace—highlighted Sovereign Poland's role as a distinct, often more radical flank challenging PiS's centrist tendencies on sovereignty and institutional overhaul.[93]
Ideological Stance and Coalition Dynamics
Sovereign Poland, under Zbigniew Ziobro's leadership, positions itself as a staunch defender of Polish national sovereignty, viewing supranational entities like the European Union as existential threats to the country's independence, particularly since the fall of communism. The party emphasizes resistance to EU-driven policies perceived as eroding state autonomy, including judicial interference and migration quotas, framing these as assaults on Poland's constitutional order and cultural identity.[15] Ideologically, it aligns with Catholic-nationalist principles, advocating for traditional family values and opposing progressive social agendas, such as withdrawing from the Istanbul Convention on violence against women due to its promotion of what the party terms "gender ideology."[15][94]On social issues, Sovereign Poland promotes conservative Catholic teachings, prioritizing the protection of life, family structures, and national heritage against secular liberalization, which it attributes to external influences undermining Poland's moral fabric. This stance manifests in support for strict anti-corruption measures intertwined with cultural preservation, positioning the party as a hardline faction within Poland's right-wing spectrum.[94]In coalition dynamics, Sovereign Poland originated as a 2012 splinter from Law and Justice (PiS), representing its more radical Catholic-nationalist wing, but realigned as a junior partner in the United Right alliance that governed from 2015 to 2023.[95] Tensions arose periodically, including threats of withdrawal over policy disputes like judicial reforms, yet the partnership endured to maintain a united conservative front against centrist and left-leaning opponents. Following PiS's electoral defeat in October 2023, Sovereign Poland operated in loose opposition coordination with PiS, but on October 9, 2024, the two merged, consolidating hard-right forces to bolster their challenge to the ruling coalition led by Donald Tusk.[21] This merger reflects pragmatic ideological overlap on sovereignty and conservatism, while absorbing Sovereign Poland's distinct emphasis on unyielding resistance to EU encroachment into PiS's broader platform.[21]
Political Ideology
Commitment to National Sovereignty
Zbigniew Ziobro has consistently advocated for Poland's national sovereignty, particularly in opposition to perceived encroachments by the European Union on domestic judicial and constitutional matters. As leader of the Sovereign Poland party, which he founded as a more hardline faction emphasizing Catholic-nationalist principles, Ziobro rebranded the party in May 2023 to underscore its mission against threats to Polish independence, declaring that "Poland's sovereignty is in greatest danger since the fall of communism" due to supranational pressures.[96][97]In response to EU mechanisms conditioning recovery funds on judicial reforms, Ziobro framed these as economic blackmail aimed at undermining Polish self-governance. Following a February 2022 Polish court ruling upholding the EU's rule-of-law instrument, he warned that such tools risked stripping Poland of "freedom, democracy and sovereignty," vowing resistance to prevent external imposition of policies via financial leverage.[83] He reiterated this in December 2021, threatening a potential EU veto against the Commission's use of funding withholding powers, which he deemed "illegitimate" interference.[98]Ziobro's judicial overhaul initiatives, implemented during his tenure as Minister of Justice from 2015 to 2023, were presented as essential safeguards of national authority against supranational overreach. He argued that EU demands for alignment with European Court of Justice rulings on disciplinary chambers breached Poland's constitution, potentially causing "legal chaos" through foreign dictation of internal judicial structures.[99] In an August 2021 interview, he stated Poland should not remain in the EU "at any cost" if membership entailed ceding core sovereign competencies, prioritizing national control over integration benefits.[84]This stance extended to broader critiques of EU federalist tendencies, with Ziobro positioning Sovereign Poland as a bulwark against erosion of state autonomy in areas like migration and institutional design. In February 2025, he endorsed U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance's Munich Security Conference remarks highlighting internal European threats, calling for awakening to risks from centralized EU policies that dilute member-state sovereignty.[100] Despite subsequent merger talks with Law and Justice in October 2024, Ziobro's rhetoric maintained emphasis on reclaiming full national decision-making from Brussels-imposed constraints.[21]
Conservative Positions on Social Issues
Zbigniew Ziobro, as a prominent figure in Poland's Law and Justice (PiS) coalition and leader of the Sovereign Poland party, has consistently championed policies rooted in traditional Catholic family structures and opposition to liberal social reforms. His tenure as Minister of Justice from 2015 to 2023 emphasized judicial measures to enforce restrictions on abortion and limit expansions of LGBT rights, framing these as defenses against ideological impositions from supranational bodies like the European Union.[15][101]Regarding abortion, Ziobro supported the 2020 Constitutional Tribunal ruling that effectively banned terminations on grounds of fetal abnormalities, which had accounted for over 90% of legal abortions in Poland prior to the decision. Under his oversight, the prosecutor's office pursued cases against activists aiding abortions, such as the 2022 charging of Justyna Wydrzyńska for providing misoprostol pills, resulting in her conviction to eight months of community service in March 2023. In September 2024, Ziobro backed a PiS bill to criminalize assistance in abortions with up to three years' imprisonment, though it failed to pass before elections. These actions reflect his view that abortion constitutes an unjustifiable taking of life, prioritizing fetal rights over maternal choice in non-rape or life-threatening scenarios.[102][103]On LGBT issues, Ziobro has opposed same-sex marriage and adoption rights, stating in July 2020 that the EU must not "force Poland to legalize gay marriage" as it contradicts national values. He criticized a 2018 Supreme Court ruling affirming that "LGBT ideology" does not qualify as a prohibited practice under labor law, calling it an infringement on freedom. Ziobro's ministry provided financial compensation to municipalities that adopted resolutions declaring themselves free of "LGBT ideology" after they lost EU funds in 2020, defending such measures as protections for constitutional family norms. In 2022, he endorsed a bill proposing up to two years' imprisonment for public promotion of "LGBT ideology" among minors. These positions align with his advocacy for traditional marriage as exclusively between man and woman, viewing alternative family models as threats to societal cohesion.[104][105][106]Ziobro's commitment to family values extended to Poland's July 2020 announcement to withdraw from the Istanbul Convention, a treaty aimed at combating domestic violence, which he argued promoted "gender ideology" that undermines the traditional family unit comprising mother, father, and children. He contended that the convention ideologically redefines gender roles in ways incompatible with Polish culture and higher domestic protections for women. This stance underscores his broader resistance to international agreements perceived as eroding national sovereignty over social norms.[107][108]
Critique of Supranational Institutions
Zbigniew Ziobro has articulated a staunch opposition to supranational institutions, particularly the European Union, framing their interventions as threats to national sovereignty and democratic self-determination. As Minister of Justice from 2015 to 2023, he argued that EU mechanisms, such as the conditionality regulation linking funds to rule-of-law compliance, represent an overreach that subordinates member states' constitutional orders to unelected Brussels bureaucracies.[109] In a February 2022 statement following a Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) ruling upholding the mechanism, Ziobro warned that such tools endanger the sovereignty of EU countries, expressing hope for a future restoration of member states' freedoms.Ziobro's critiques intensified around judicial reforms, which he defended as necessary for Polish judicial independence but which drew EU infringement actions and financial penalties. He rejected CJEU judgments as illegitimate impositions, notably denouncing the court as "corrupt" in June 2023 after it deemed aspects of Poland's disciplinary regime for judges incompatible with EU law, vowing non-compliance to prioritize national authority.[85] Earlier, in August 2021, he asserted that Poland should not remain in the EU "at any cost" amid threats of withheld recovery funds, accusing the bloc of blackmail to enforce ideological conformity over sovereign reforms.[84]Through his Sovereign Poland party, founded in 2012 and positioned as more euroskeptic than the broader Law and Justice alliance, Ziobro has amplified calls to resist supranational primacy, including vetoing EU budgets tied to rule-of-law criteria, which he likened to "enslavement" in November 2020.[109] He has portrayed EU institutions as advancing a federalist agenda that erodes the voluntary nature of the union, prioritizing integrationist elites' preferences—often aligned with liberal judicial models—over the expressed will of national electorates, as evidenced by Poland's repeated constitutional challenges to EU law supremacy.[110] This stance underscores his broader ideological commitment to restoring intergovernmental decision-making, where supranational bodies like the CJEU and European Commission are constrained to economic cooperation rather than ideological oversight.[82]
Recent Developments and Legacy
Opposition Activities Post-2023 Elections
Following the formation of the Tusk-led coalition government in December 2023, Zbigniew Ziobro, as leader of Sovereign Poland (SP), positioned the party as a staunch critic of the new administration's policies, particularly on judicial reforms and national sovereignty. SP, holding eight seats in the Sejm, collaborated with Law and Justice (PiS) in parliamentary opposition, voting against key government bills aimed at reversing PiS-era judicial changes and restoring EU funds access. Ziobro publicly denounced these efforts as subservient to Brussels, arguing they undermined Polish judicial independence.[111]In 2024, SP participated in broader conservative mobilizations against the government's social policy shifts, including marches in 16 cities on June 15 protesting proposed expansions of abortion access and LGBT+ initiatives, which Ziobro framed as cultural erosion imposed by liberal elites.[112] These events drew thousands, with SP emphasizing family values and resistance to supranational influences. Ziobro's rhetoric intensified, portraying Tusk as "vindictive" and intent on eliminating opponents through institutional control.[111]A pivotal development occurred on October 12, 2024, when SP merged with PiS at a congress in Przysucha, consolidating opposition forces under PiS leadership while retaining Ziobro's influence on hardline stances. This unification aimed to counter the ruling coalition's dominance, with Ziobro advocating for a return to sovereignty-focused governance. Post-merger, he continued vocal critiques, stating on October 18, 2025, that Tusk was "losing his political edge" amid governance challenges.[21][113]SP and allied opposition groups also engaged in public events like the November 11, 2024, Independence Day march in Warsaw, attended by tens of thousands, where nationalist leaders, including PiS figures aligned with Ziobro's views, rallied against perceived government authoritarianism and EU overreach. Ziobro highlighted political motivations behind government actions, such as corruption probes, as efforts to shield ruling party figures rather than pursue justice.[114][72]
Ongoing Legal Battles and Public Defense (2024–2025)
In March 2024, Polish prosecutors under the new government led by Donald Tusk initiated a financial probe into the alleged misuse of approximately 285 million złoty (about €66 million) from the Justice Fund during Ziobro's tenure as Minister of Justice, accusing officials of diverting funds for political purposes rather than victim support.[95][88] On March 26, 2024, special services forced entry into Ziobro's home as part of this investigation, prompting him to publicly state that the action interrupted his ongoing chemotherapy treatment and constituted harassment without substantive evidence.[115] Ziobro denied any wrongdoing, framing the probe as retaliation by the Tusk administration against former Law and Justice (PiS) officials for prior anti-corruption efforts.[88] Seven individuals, including associates from his ministry, faced charges related to fund mismanagement, though Ziobro himself was not formally charged at that stage.[88]Parallel investigations intensified in 2025, focusing on the PiS government's use of Pegasus spyware. A parliamentary commission, established post-2023 elections, probed Ziobro's role in authorizing surveillance, leading to a January 31, 2025, attempt to detain him that was widely criticized as staged for political effect.[116] On March 31, 2025, a Warsaw district court rejected the commission's request for his detention, ruling that the body lacked legal authority to compel such measures, citing procedural irregularities.[117][118] Ziobro maintained that these actions violated a 2024 Constitutional Tribunal decision declaring the commission's operations unconstitutional, positioning them as an abuse of state power to target opposition figures.[91] By September 29, 2025, police forcibly removed Ziobro from a plane at Warsaw's Chopin Airport to compel testimony before the commission, an event he decried as a violation of parliamentary immunity and personal freedoms.[9][119]In public statements and through Sovereign Poland, Ziobro has defended himself by arguing that the probes represent a systematic "weaponization of justice" by the Tusk coalition to dismantle PiS legacies, including judicial reforms aimed at combating post-communist influences.[120] He has highlighted the lack of convictions despite extensive searches and referrals, contrasting it with what he describes as selective prosecution that spares Tusk allies implicated in similar past scandals.[72] On October 8, 2025, the spyware commission referred Ziobro's case to prosecutors, alleging his direct responsibility for spyware deployment against opponents, yet no formal indictment followed by late October, underscoring ongoing procedural disputes.[121] Supporters, including conservative outlets, view these battles as evidence of institutional bias under the current administration, which has restructured prosecutorial bodies to prioritize reviews of PiS-era cases while halting investigations into ruling coalition members.[120]