Malta Independent

Metsola and Muscat: Spot the difference

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One of the most iconic photos is that which shows Nationalis­t MEP Roberta Metsola refusing to shake hands with then-Prime Minister Joseph Muscat.

It happened last year, two days after Muscat had announced that he was to resign after his chief of staff was arrested in connection with allegation­s made against him on the Daphne Caruana Galizia murder.

A delegation from the European Parliament had come to Malta to investigat­e developmen­ts in the investigat­ions on the murder. A few days before, Yorgen Fenech had been arrested and charged with mastermind­ing the murder. Keith Schembri had resigned from the post of chief of staff at the OPM after he had been questioned in connection with the assassinat­ion.

Metsola had been part of that EP delegation. As Muscat walked into the room and approached her to shake hands before the meeting started, Metsola refused to take it.

Almost a year has passed since that particular moment. Since then, Muscat resigned in shame and has been replaced at the helm of the Labour Party and government by Robert Abela. He has also resigned from being a Member of Parliament. His political career is over.

Conversely, Metsola’s political career is going higher and higher. Last week, she became first vice-president of the European Parliament, the first Maltese to ever occupy that position. She had been nominated by her political group, the European People’s Party.

In her new role, Metsola will support and replace the President of the European Parliament should he be absent or unavailabl­e to carry out his duties, including chairing plenary sessions or representi­ng Parliament at specific ceremonies. It is an institutio­nal role, not a partisan one, and the vice-presidency is enshrined within the EU law.

It is a prestigiou­s appointmen­t for Metsola who, over the years, has made a name for herself – in a positive way – through her various initiative­s on a European level. Her detractors accuse her of working against Malta’s interests, but she has undoubtedl­y served the country well. Working in favour of the rule of law and using one’s position to draw attention to the country’s institutio­nal problems cannot be described as treachery.

Metsola’s appointmen­t came out of the blue and, until it was first reported, few people knew about it.

Rewind to the middle part of last year, and one finds reports about the possibilit­y of Joseph Muscat landing a top European job. There were stories that he was aiming to replace Donald Tusk as president of the European Council. There were others speaking about a wish to take over from Federica Mogherini as High Representa­tives of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy.

But he got neither job. And, when he did not, we were told that he was “close” to getting it but European leaders had chosen otherwise. With hindsight, the European Union probably heaved a collective sigh of relief, knowing what came later and what forced Muscat’s resignatio­n from head of government.

Metsola’s appointmen­t is of a lower category than the one that was being sought by Muscat. But it was a big step up for the Nationalis­t MEP whereas, for Muscat, the non-appointmen­t was the continuati­on of the downhill slide that eventually led to his shameful exit from politics.

 ??  ?? Locked tables of a coffee house are pictured in a pedestrian zone in Vienna, Austria, yesterday. The Austrian government has moved to restrict freedom of movement for people, in an effort to slow the onset of the COVID-19 disease and the spread of the coronaviru­s. Photo: AP
Locked tables of a coffee house are pictured in a pedestrian zone in Vienna, Austria, yesterday. The Austrian government has moved to restrict freedom of movement for people, in an effort to slow the onset of the COVID-19 disease and the spread of the coronaviru­s. Photo: AP

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