Day 3: (4) Dark clouds over Europe

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2022-02-23T12:18:13+01:00Wed, 23rd Feb '22, 12:18|

While we’re busy celebrating the fact that Marsascala Creek will not after all be claimed by a yacht marina, there’s some serious geo-political shifting happening on the Continent. I don’t seriously expect the goings on at the Ukrainian border to become an electoral issue. Though if things go down a darker road we will wonder [...]

Day 3: (3) Mutual dependence

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2022-02-23T12:16:27+01:00Wed, 23rd Feb '22, 12:16|

This is a post by Massimo Zammit, a self-declared fan of Labour Minister José Herrera. Someone has to be, so that’s not terrible in and of itself. Except that Massimo Zammit is CEO of Teatru Manoel, a government organisation that reports to José Herrera. It is bad enough that Ministers hire cronies to run their [...]

Day 3: (2) How we love U-turns

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2022-02-23T12:14:43+01:00Wed, 23rd Feb '22, 12:14|

Not only did the government dramatize its reversal on the Marsascala marina, packaging it as good news and a miracle of democracy. They had to serialise it as well to maximise the political benefit from doing bugger all. First Chris Fearne got a round of applause for partly disagreeing with the project. Then Owen Bonnici [...]

Day 3: (1) Figures of hate

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2022-02-23T12:12:21+01:00Wed, 23rd Feb '22, 12:12|

In its 1996 general election campaign, the PN borrowed an idea from the Tories’ attempt to demonise Tony Blair and stuck the top half of Alfred Sant’s face to the bottom of a campaign poster headlined “Ma Tistax Tafdah”, “you can’t trust him”. Anecdotally that poster, a first brush with explicitly negative campaigning, caused the [...]

Day 2: (4) Allergy to rules

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2022-02-22T09:51:18+01:00Tue, 22nd Feb '22, 09:51|

Google requires its advertisers to be transparent about how much money they spend in political advertising. The reason the rules exist is that advertising a political party or a candidate is not like selling chocolate, it is not just a matter of money. If democracy and voter behaviour become purely an extension of how much [...]

Day 2: (3) If you want new faces, the old ones must go

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2022-02-22T09:44:39+01:00Tue, 22nd Feb '22, 09:44|

For years Claudio Grech was my colleague, and for years he was my direct supervisor. I have more reasons than most to feel regret he has left front line politics without the country getting the chance of having him run a government department for a few years. Whether Labour or Nationalist, genuinely competent, calm, and [...]

Day 2: (2) You don’t have to love them.

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2022-02-22T09:43:03+01:00Tue, 22nd Feb '22, 09:43|

Mark Camilleri, an antediluvian Marxist, an inveterate Mintoffjan, a former delegate of the Labour Party, someone who voted for Joseph Muscat and was keen to see him made prime minister, declared yesterday that the country needs the PN to save it. His logic is unimpeachable. He hasn’t started liking the PN. He just thinks, as [...]

Day 2: (1) Doctor in the breach

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2022-02-22T17:09:38+01:00Tue, 22nd Feb '22, 09:41|

Stephen Montefort stood at a Labour Party event to tell us we should not trust doctors, we should not trust science, we should not trust medicine, and we should not trust epidemiology. That’s because we have a better doctor in Robert Abela whom Stephen Montefort commends to us as a fount of infallible knowledge on [...]

Strange choice

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2022-02-21T13:48:56+01:00Mon, 21st Feb '22, 13:48|

This is a screenshot from Robert Abela's Facebook page. This photo, one would expect, is Robert Abela's campaign photo, the most important visual asset in what appears to be the central theme of this election campaign. So I have one question. Why isn't Abela looking at us? Why can't he look us in the eye?

Ireland moves to restrain SLAPP suits

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2022-02-21T13:36:34+01:00Mon, 21st Feb '22, 13:36|

Ireland looks set to be the first EU jurisdiction to introduce laws to limit the use of strategic lawsuits filed by people seeking to shut journalists or activists up with courtroom bullying. The proposed changes are included in a report by Justice Minister Helen McEntee to Ireland’s Cabinet in preparation of the publication of a [...]

The first day (9): Political justice

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2022-02-21T12:55:53+01:00Mon, 21st Feb '22, 12:55|

There are 33 days left in the life of this Parliament, the most disgraceful in living memory. It started out with the foreseeable re-election of Joseph Muscat with an unforeseeably larger majority over his 2013 election.  Keith Schembri climbed back into his office in Castille. Konrad Mizzi was made super-minister. Chris Cardona would reach the [...]

The first day (8): Choking on propaganda

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2022-02-21T12:50:10+01:00Mon, 21st Feb '22, 12:50|

For the years in between general elections political parties keep up the burden of running TV stations, radio stations, newspapers, and online and social media presence, to keep oiled and hot the engines of electioneering. For all that time they suffocate political discourse by reducing everything, absolutely everything, to the zero-sum game of one side [...]

The first day (7): Papal snub

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2022-02-21T12:43:10+01:00Mon, 21st Feb '22, 12:43|

Pope Francis is due to visit Malta a week after the next general election. He didn’t mean it that way and, word is, he was told it would not be that way. It’s going to be awkward. This country does not wake up indifferent to an election result. So fair and foul a week as [...]

The first day (6): The prospects of reform

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2022-02-21T12:40:05+01:00Mon, 21st Feb '22, 12:40|

Even after the trauma of the last four years, the violence that killed Daphne Caruana Galizia, the enormity of the economic price of grey-listing, the social costs of a widening economic gap and the promise of greater tax burdens to pay for the cost of our isolation in the world ... even after all that, [...]

The first day (5): Holding your nose

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2022-02-21T12:30:32+01:00Mon, 21st Feb '22, 12:30|

I still remember a heated discussion I had with an old friend just before the last election. She was getting ready to vote one of the small parties because she was disgusted by the corruption of Muscat’s government and still shuddered at the thought of Lawrence Gonzi’s ministers getting back into power. I gave her [...]

The first day (4): The former leaders

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2022-02-21T12:21:40+01:00Mon, 21st Feb '22, 12:21|

Both main parties are not quite as cohesive as they’d like us to believe. The PN is giving Adrian Delia a platform nearly guaranteeing his re-election to Parliament and, should he have the wit to take it, an offer of a prominent seat in the next Parliament’s shadow cabinet. That presumes a defeat for the [...]

The first day (3): Campaigning makes a difference

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2022-02-21T12:56:55+01:00Mon, 21st Feb '22, 12:16|

The polling gap between the PL and the PN is a yawning chasm. Although the margin yawned wider in the chaotic interregnum of Adrian the Inadequate, the PN never in all the time since the 2017 election, polled better than the PN. Incidentally the PN has almost never polled better than the PL since sometime [...]

The first day (2): The leaders

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2022-02-21T12:10:37+01:00Mon, 21st Feb '22, 12:10|

It is a cliché of domestic political analysis to say our elections are presidential ballots crushed into a parliamentary system. Dom Mintoff was the prototype of the post-colonial demagogue. Eddie Fenech Adami’s profile started small. He was depicted in cartoons in the Labour press as a swaddled baby, an infant in comparison with the pipe-puffing, [...]

The first day (1): The game is afoot

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2022-02-21T12:05:30+01:00Mon, 21st Feb '22, 12:05|

  We are now formally in an election campaign, though the change in the national atmosphere is only formalistic. The campaign is far longer than its last 33 days. Since 2017, since Joseph Muscat, election dates are no longer announced in sober statements delivered by an outgoing prime minister on the way out of the [...]

GUEST POST: It’s not a government. It’s a crime syndicate.

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2022-02-21T11:16:41+01:00Mon, 21st Feb '22, 08:52|

These aren’t my words. This is the title of a piece Daphne Caruana Galizia wrote in February 2017, 8 months before she was brutally assassinated. In this article, she writes: ‘Malta is governed by a crime syndicate, and the first thing that crime syndicate set about doing, when it achieved its suspiciously-funded objective of getting [...]

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