Quid pro quo for Baxa

Outgoing Chief Justice Josef Baxa of the Supreme Administrative Court said after meeting with Pres. Miloš Zeman on May 29, 2018, that he was “leaving with a good feeling. We agreed on what kind of new leadership the Court should have.” They didn’t discuss his own future, he said. Eight months later, after it became clear that Zeman wouldn’t appoint him to succeed Pavel Rychetský as chief justice of the Constitutional Court, Baxa changed his tune about the May 29 meeting and accused Zeman of indicating then that he wanted a quid pro quo for naming him to succeed Rychetský. Baxa failed yesterday to convince the constitutional-legal committee of the Senate that he should now be confirmed to the Constitutional Court and said that there is “shadow puppetry” surrounding his nomination. It’s a continuation of what began earlier. Ironically, Baxa’s confirmation now apparently depends on whether the new president, Petr Pavel, is willing to do a quid pro quo deal with the coalition-led Senate.

Source

Recent posts

See All
  • Hans Weber
  • April 24, 2025

Jak Teherán buduje vliv stovky kilometrů od svých hranic

  • Hans Weber
  • April 24, 2025

Iran and the Polisario: Proxy Conflict in North Africa

  • Hans Weber
  • March 27, 2025

Tunisian National Day –March 20th

Prague Forum Membership

Join us

Be part of building bridges and channels to engage all the international key voices and decision makers living in the Czech Republic.

Become a member

Prague Forum Membership

Join us

    Close