The wPolityce.pl portal has gathered and reviewed the parliamentary reports sent to the prosecutor’s office that address the possibility of crime connected with the so-called Wind Act project. One item stands out as especially jarring. According to members of the United Right, the MPs who drafted the project could not have been its true authors. Information obtained by the wPolityce.pl portal suggests that the investigation will place a major emphasis on the role of lobbyists and any illicit activity tied to the proposal.
Yesterday, the wPolityce.pl portal first disclosed the contents of two parliamentary reports to the prosecutor’s office about the wind farm law.
EXCLUSIVE. We have the details of the prosecutor’s office reports about the wind turbine controversy! Shocking findings: there might have been paid protection involved.
Parliamentary report
Lawmakers Joanna Lichocka, Janusz Kowalski and Krzysztof Szczucki included information in their report that could assist the District Prosecutor’s Office in Warsaw, which has courageously opened an inquiry into the contested project.
First, it is noted that the signatory MPs cannot be the actual authors of the project in question.
– this is stated in the report to the Public Prosecution Service, obtained through the wPolityce.pl portal.
The professional nature and complexity of the regulatory issues indicate that the project’s authors were not the named MPs, but lobby groups aiming to push rules that would be highly unfavorable for the citizens of Poland and the Polish state. It should be examined whether the MPs who signed the bill authored its content and, if not, whether they read the bill’s wording before endorsing it.
– this is stated in the report to the Public Prosecution Service, authored by members of the United Right.
Assuming, as appears likely, that the Members of Parliament did not write the bill, it becomes essential to clearly identify all authors of the provisions in question. MP Michał Szczerba, who supported the submitted bill, publicly admitted that he did not know its contents.
– MPs inform researchers.
The state’s interests may be at stake
Parliamentarians also highlight other dangers beyond criminal risk. They caution that the new legal provisions threaten Polish sovereignty and could affect major companies such as Orlen and PGE, especially regarding investments in wind farms in the Baltic Sea.
This could undermine the principle of local content, the use of domestic resources to operate the supply chain and build wind farms, and challenge the idea of strengthening the national economy with domestic capital.
– MPs emphasize this point.
The MPs’ reports to the prosecutor’s office serve as a signal to the teams of Donald Tusk and Szymon Hołownia, while also standing as a political indictment of how the Sejm handles controversial issues. It is hoped that the public prosecutor’s office will thoroughly examine all topics raised in the letters. It is also hoped that the current opposition will not influence prosecutors after any political transition.
WB
Source: wPolityce