Malta Independent

‘PN put needs of the people first’ Delia on party’s MP pension U-turn

- Julian Bonnici

Nationalis­t Party (PN) leader Adrian Delia has insisted that the party was prioritisi­ng the needs of the public when it changed its stance on the proposed legislativ­e amendments on MPs’ pensions, and that this decision was not based on political expediency.

Last week the government presented amendments that would have seen MPs entitled to a full pension (upon reaching retirement age) after serving only one term. Currently, they have to serve two terms to be entitled to a parliament­ary pension. Both main parties had initially been in agreement, only for the PN to withdraw its consensus on Monday evening, leading to the government withdrawin­g the proposal.

Delia was asked by The Malta Independen­t, whether the PN parliament­ary group’s swift turnabout was a result of political convenienc­e.

“The PN’s position on pensions is clear; we must put people first. We are here to serve and the PN, hearing what the people had said, acted. Irrespecti­ve of the bill, at the moment our absolute priority should be to help those who are struggling to make ends meet,” Delia replied.

Partit Demokratik­u (PD) spearheade­d opposition to the proposal, which culminated in a parliament­ary petition calling for a debate on pension reform prior to any changes being made to MPs’ pensions. In a statement, the PD said that “having exposed the collusion between the PN and the PL in previous days, the PD has veritably checkmated this motion and is thus declaring a victory for the Maltese people.”

The PN later called for the debate to be suspended. Reacting to the PN announceme­nt, the government said a decision on the reform required consensus. Discussion­s about the proposals put forward by the Associatio­n of Former MPs had been ongoing for months and the government only proposed the amendments after seeing that there was agreement with the Opposition.

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