A revived "V4 will be one of the greatest powers", declared Poland's Donald Tusk.
A revived "V4 will be one of the greatest powers", declared Poland's Donald Tusk.
The Polish prime minister said that he is now trying to "minimise the losses" caused by the diplomatic spat.
Aleks Szczerbiak The government faces a difficult re-election campaign next year.
The bill would allow same-sex partners to sign a contract granting them some of the rights available to married couples.
The government expects to sign dozens of contracts worth around 100 billion zloty (€24 billion) in total by 30 May.
"The challenges Europe now faces demand an even stronger partnership," said British Prime Minister Keir Starmer.
The opposition have criticised the government for failing to clamp down on the fake calls.
Magyar said that his government can "learn from Poland" on restoring the rule of law, recovering frozen EU funds, and fighting corruption.
Donald Tusk's comments came after Reuters reported that a senior US official intervened to ensure that Zbigniew Ziobro received a visa.
There is "no better proof of the durability, reliability and long-term outlook of Polish-US cooperation", says PM Donald Tusk.
Warsaw's mayor said his city would already begin recognising same-sex marriages from other EU states.
The development came a day after new Hungarian PM Péter Magyar, who has pledged to extradite Zbigniew Ziobro, took office.
The decision was welcomed Prime Minister Donald Tusk, who said it must immediately be enforced.
The prime minister previously said he would not want to "undermine European solidarity" by "poaching" US troops from Germany.
His remarks have been strongly criticised by the opposition, who say that Tusk is prioritising Germany's interests over Poland's security.
However, Karol Nawrocki currently lacks the two-thirds majority in parliament to implement such change.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen singled out Poland as "an essential pillar of Europe's security architecture".
Sławomir Cenckiewicz says he will now focus on helping the opposition unseat the government at next year's elections.
Tusk emphasised that the two countries "share precisely the same concerns regarding today's geostrategic instability".
The judge said that Kaczyński "bears moral responsibility for tragedies" that occurred as a result of the near-total abortion ban.
However, the security services say that the ruling will not automatically result in Sławomir Cenckiewicz regaining his clearance.
The two countries aim to cooperate more closely on security, infrastructure, nuclear energy, artificial intelligence and agriculture.
The two countries have signed a new comprehensive strategic partnership.
Polish PM Donald Tusk expressed his "joy" at Magyar's victory.
The PM also unveiled a group of ten party figures who will "lead us into battle" at next year's parliamentary elections.
The development marks a further twist in Poland's rule-of-law crisis.
Aleks Szczerbiak The president's veto has crystallised deep divides and turbocharged the government's "Polexit" narrative.
The president could refuse to swear in the new judges, deepening Poland's rule-of-law crisis.
It says the €44bn will still reach Poland, but will be harder to spend without the vetoed law.
Karol Nawrocki has now submitted his own "sovereign" alternative to the EU's SAFE programme to parliament.