The News

Polish EU Lawmaker Says Women Intellectually Inferior to Men

FILE-. Chosen a European lawmaker, he has repeatedly made comments that have outraged other lawmakers. The president of the EU parliament opened an investigation Thursday, March 2, 2017 into his comments that "women must earn less than men because they are weaker, they are smaller, they are less intelligent." He can be reprimanded fined or temporarily suspended for such comments. He recently said in Warsaw that it is a "20th-century stereotype that women have the same intellectual potential as men." (AP Photo/Alik Keplicz)

WARSAW, Poland  — A Polish member of the European Parliament has launched another sexist tirade, calling it a “20th century stereotype that women have the same intellectual potential as men,” and that the stereotype “must be destroyed because it is not true.”

Janusz Korwin-Mikke’s insults on Friday in Warsaw came two days after he told the European Parliament that “women must earn less than men because they are weaker, they are smaller, they are less intelligent.”

The president of the Parliament opened an investigation Thursday into the comments, for which Korwin-Mikke could face sanctions such as a reprimand, a fine or a temporary suspension.

His latest blast came after he was challenged by female lawmakers during a visit to the Polish parliament in Warsaw. Joanna Scheuring-Wielgus, from the Modern party, accused him of offending women and said she would not allow him to do it again.

“There are more women than men in Poland, we’re better educated, and I will not let you offend Polish women, European women and women all over the world. It’s a disgrace,” she told him.

Korwin-Mikke has a history of getting attention for outrageous comments, including comparing the European Union to the Third Reich.

In 2015, he raised his arm in a Nazi salute to make a political point in the European Parliament, the EU’s elected legislative arm, forcing the centrist government in Warsaw at the time to apologize and express shame for his behavior.

Korwin-Mikke heads a small party which won just under 5 percent of the vote in Poland’s last parliamentary election in 2015, failing to clear the 5 percent threshold to get any seats.