Malta Independent

The longest forty-eight hours

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The Nationalis­t Party may have reached a new low when on Monday it decided to break away with good internal governance it has always been worthy of and relegated a sensitive issue such as the election to elect its leader into a contest which can be likened to a classroom prefect election.

The Administra­tive Council of the party met in haste on Monday evening following a request sent to it by one of its councillor­s on Saturday, just while the early voting process was taking place.

Later that evening we learnt that approximat­ely 10% of those eligible to vote had turned up to vote early. The Nationalis­t Party felt compelled to issue a press statement on Saturday, halfway through the early voting process, to inform everyone that its Administra­tive Council would be convening urgently on Monday to discuss the request.

While all of this smelled fishy on Saturday, what was in store for Monday was a shocking surprise. In a two-hour meeting, the Council decided to create a disciplina­ry body to be chaired by veteran and former (PN) Minister Louis Galea to investigat­e, over two days, the allegation­s levelled by Daphne Caruana Galizia at leadership hopeful Adrian Delia.

During the general election campaign,

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outgoing PN leader Simon Busuttil took umbrage at Prime Minister Joseph Muscat after the latter suggested that Magistrate Aaron Bugeja be held responsibl­e if the election is lost by the PL.

Back then, the PN claimed that the judiciary ought to be free of pressures of any sort. Fast forward three months, back in their backyard, the PN gives two days to its own disciplina­ry committee to decide the future of one of its four leadership contenders.

The reasoning must have been that while the party cannot ignore these serious allegation­s, it is constraine­d by the short timeframe considerin­g that this Saturday around 1,200 councillor­s will call at Dar Ċentrali to vote for their favourite two of the four. The fact that 10% had already cast their vote was ignored by the Council.

Surprising­ly, the selected members of the disciplina­ry committee accepted to take on this mammoth challenge and set to work as of yesterday morning. In just two days they will evaluate the evidence, formulate the accusation­s, gather witnesses, corroborat­e their evidence and come up with an opinion for the Administra­tive Council to consider. In the meantime, this newsroom is hearing that other letters were received by the Council to investigat­e all four candidates, all by Saturday.

Upon seeing such irresponsi­ble behaviour, one starts to wonder what exactly is happening behind the scenes. The immediate suspect is that some persons in the PN are trying to stop or postpone Saturday’s contest irrespecti­ve of the past 10 weeks, during which four contenders invested hefty sums of money, time, effort and resources in their respective campaigns.

But upon reading the party’s statute, one quickly reaches the conclusion that neither the disciplina­ry committee nor the Administra­tive Council have the power to pause the election. One also wonders where the PN’s electoral commission fits into all of this. Should we expect a report by tomorrow before the four contenders go head to head again on NET TV? How many of them will be under investigat­ion by then?

Whether or not Adrian Delia is found in breach of the party’s statute and stopped from contesting, the suspicion has crept in that the intention behind this charade was to undermine his credibilit­y, if there’s any left of it, with party supporters.

If this results to be the case, then the PN needs a break from politics until it rebuilds itself into a credible party worthy of its thousands of supporters.

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