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“Tusk was biting his nails out of nervousness.” Woś presented a timeline of the government’s latest blunders

“It must be said that this was indeed a very difficult week for Tusk and a very good week for Polish patriots. Many people are beginning to open their eyes to this brutality, this lawlessness, and the general disregard for legal norms,” said MP Michał Woś (Law and Justice – PiS) on TV Republika. The politician listed what he described as a series of significant missteps by Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s government over the past week.

“It was a week during which Donald Tusk was probably biting his nails out of anxiety—along with his entire coalition. A week so bad that one could point to major incidents each day that undoubtedly worked against Tusk’s interests,” 

Woś said during an appearance on TV Republika with Adrian Klarenbach.

The MP proceeded to enumerate the events:

“First, Monday and the court’s ruling on pre-trial detention—a major embarrassment for the Pegasus Committee, with its ‘outstanding individuals’ such as Ms. Sroka, Zembaczyński, and Trela,” Woś said. This referred to efforts to have Zbigniew Ziobro detained. “Even a judge known for his antipathy toward PiS admitted there was no legal basis for such an arrest.”

“Tuesday saw a massive humiliation for the government with the release of Cyba, likely at the request of the prison administration, or perhaps at the behest or with the knowledge of the Ministry of Justice. The murderer of Marek Rosiak—sentenced to life imprisonment, a psychopathic killer—was freely walking the streets,” 

Woś reminded viewers.

“Wednesday—another day, marked by the work of the Team for the Prevention of Lawlessness and a thorough analysis of what happened to the late Barbara Skrzypek. I have not the slightest doubt that her interrogation was deliberate, with countless procedural doubts surrounding it, and three aggressive lawyers pitted against a retired woman in poor health,” 

he elaborated.

Woś recalled that Skrzypek died two and a half days after the incident, with medical assessments indicating that a heart attack could result from intense stress two to three days after the triggering event.

Thursday was the case of Anna Wójcik’s release. 

“It seems that by Thursday, after Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, Tusk had already seen polling data and realized they were overreaching in the eyes of the public. These ‘investigative detentions’ were becoming visible to society. So much so that by Friday, even ‘Gazeta Wyborcza’ had to concede that Bodnar’s neo-prosecutor’s office is highly politicized, using punitive transfers and that there are political prisoners—such as Dariusz Matecki,”

 Woś commented.

As for Friday, Woś brought up the issue of health insurance contributions and the allegedly illegal dismissal of Judge Radzik. “The Minister appoints him for a term and cannot remove him arbitrarily, and yet Adam Bodnar declared that it is ‘presumed’ he may do so,” Woś noted.

“It must be said,” he concluded, “that this was truly a very difficult week for Tusk and a very good week for Polish patriots. Many people are waking up to this brutality, this lawlessness, and the fundamental lack of respect for the rule of law.”

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