"Grexit" and "Frexit," for Greece and France, were two subjects of speculation.
Now, months of open conflict between Poland's conservative nationalist government and the rest of the EU has some Poles wondering if their leaders are putting the country on a path that could take it out of the union.
"There is a question mark over Poland's European future today," European Council President Donald Tusk, a former Polish prime minister who is a critic of the ruling Law and Justice party, said Thursday.
But members of the opposition in Poland increasingly are voicing fears that the conflicts between Warsaw and Brussels could eventually lead to a parting of ways.
They point to the defiant stance Law and Justice and its leader, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, adopted when the EU raised concerns about changes to Poland's justice system and the extensive logging the government has ordered in a primeval forest that has been classified as a UNESCO world heritage site.
"Poland is a member of EU and is going to be a leading partner to other member states within the structure," Bochenek told The Associated Press yesterday. "We have got many ambitious projects and challenges to realise in the EU. We will cooperate with our European partners."
Law and Justice has never publicly advocated leaving the bloc, but criticises what it views as unnecessary EU bureaucracy and infringements on the authority of member countries to make their own decisions.
In that vein, Poland's government aggressively pushed through legislation to put the court system under the ruling party's control. The EU's executive arm has said the moves violate democratic norms by reducing judicial independence.
The government also has continued logging in the Bialowieza Forest even though the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg ordered it last week to stop felling trees immediately. If it continues, Poland could be hit with massive fines.
Katarzyna Lubnauer, a lawmaker with the opposition Modern party, said recently that because Poles are such "Euro- enthusiasts," nobody in the ruling Law and Justice party would admit that leaving the bloc is their aim.
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