The author holds a view that the binding Polish constitution, despite some positive aspects of human rights regulation, needs significant amendments. Its primary fault is the lack of sufficient legal grounds for the correct and honest functioning of public authority. The constitution enables and does not punish disrespect and violation of authority by the people performing public functions. It neither defines the decisive role of the Nation in governing the state nor its relation to the law of the European Union. The author describes the scope of the necessary modifications of the constitution concerning the regulation and guarantee of fundamental rights (such as the right to life, the political rights and the right to complain about ...