Parliament has voted to remove the legal immunity of Grzegorz Braun, the far-right MP who last month attacked a Jewish religious celebration. Every main parliamentary group other than Braun’s own Confederation (Konfederacja) supported the move.

Prosecutors want to bring seven charges against Braun, who has a long history of controversial statements and actions, including promoting various conspiracy theories regarding Jews, LGBT people and the coronavirus pandemic.

Two of the charges relate to the incident in December when Braun used a fire extinguisher to put out candles that had just been lit to celebrate the Jewish festival of Hanukkah. One of those charges is for the crime of “insulting an object of religious worship”, which carries a potential prison sentence of up to two years.

Other charges relate to assault and defamation against former health minister Łukasz Szumowski, reports the Polish Press Agency (PAP). Szumowski was a primary target for Braun’s criticism of lockdown restrictions and vaccination drives during the pandemic.

Further charges – of damage to property and breach of the peace – relate to one incident in which Braun disrupted a lecture by a Polish-Jewish Holocaust scholar and another in which he removed a Christmas tree from a courthouse because it was decorated with EU and LGBT flags.

Today, the Sejm, the lower house of parliament in which Braun sits, was asked to vote seven times on whether to strip him of immunity to face each of the charges. MPs are normally immune from prosecution.

In each of the votes, a large majority of MPs (ranging between 386 and 402 in the 460-seat chamber) supported withdrawing Braun’s immunity.

In a debate before the votes, Braun took to the podium to give a speech in which he defended his attack on the hanukkiah by claiming that “Talmudists are racists” who follow a “false cult” and his attack on the Christmas tree because it “was decorated by pederasts and eurofederalists”.

One of the leaders of Confederation, Sławomir Mentzen, accused MPs from the ruling coalition of hypocrisy, noting that they had supported abortion protesters who “attacked churches” but now wanted to see Braun charged for attacking a Jewish ceremony.

Braun’s actions have, however, been condemned by MPs from across the rest of the political spectrum, many of whom attended a specially organised ceremony a few days after the incident at which the Hanukkah candles were lit again.

Some MPs also called for Confederation’s deputy speaker of the Sejm, Krzysztof Bosak, to be removed from the position because his group has only suspended Braun rather than expelling him.

However, in a separate vote, also held today, the Sejm decided not to remove Bosak as deputy speaker. Only 26 MPs voted in favour of the idea, mostly from The Left (Lewica).

Almost all MPs from the centrist Civic Coalition (KO), the main ruling party, abstained while almost all from the national-conservative Law and Justice (PiS) party, the main opposition, did not attend the vote. The centre-right Third Way (Trzecia Droga) voted against the motion to dismiss Bosak.


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Main image credit: Dawid Zuchowicz / Agencja Wyborcza.pl

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