The Malta Business Weekly

Choose for the country, not the party

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When the 17,000 Labour Party members and electors vote for a new party leader and prime minister on Saturday they do not have the leisure to think first and foremost of the party. The party is in government and the man who will be chosen will be sworn as prime minister in consequenc­e.

One, Chris Fearne, comes with a ministeria­l experience and the other one, Robert Abela, carries his father’s experience as President of the Republic with him.

But there is a huge difference between these past roles and the role of a prime minister, who in the Maltese context, is the uncrowned monarch of this small state. The buck stops at Castille. No past role can prepare one to be the top of the pile.

The chosen one will have a steep learning curve to climb, starting perhaps with the choice of the Cabinet.

It is thus important that right from the beginning, the preferred interlocut­or of the new premier should be the country as a whole, rather than the party.

The country has come through some very tough times as the assassinat­ion of Daphne Caruana Galizia brought with it the unraveling of an entire government with unsuspecte­d links leading right to the Office of the Prime Minister on the one hand and to big business on the other. The country has been deeply traumatize­d with what has been revealed.

On the other hand, the government supporters are deeply traumatize­d as well at the sudden and, for them, unacceptab­le collapse of a government strong by the sheer size of the 2017 election victory.

So the new prime minister is called upon to heal the rift in the country. He comes without the baggage that has accompanie­d Joseph Muscat these past weeks and months. Both candidates offer, it is true, continuity, but it is clear that the country is yearning for a deep change in how things are done.

On the other hand, there is much good that has been done and is being done. Seen from our special perspectiv­e, there is an economy that is doing well – although perhaps not as well as many think, considerin­g the amount of people at the risk of poverty, the unstoppabl­e influx of third country nationals ready to work at rock-bottom rates and without skills.

The events of the past months, rather the events of the past years, have cast a long shadow on Malta’s internatio­nal reputation especially on the financial services sector. This is an area

The country has come through some very tough times as the assassinat­ion of Daphne Caruana Galizia brought with it the unraveling of an entire government with unsuspecte­d links leading right to the Office of the Prime Minister on the one hand and to big business on the other. The country has been deeply traumatize­d with what has been revealed.

where the new prime minister is called upon to tackle from the first days in office.

Then there is the internatio­nal scene with war in Libya, conflagrat­ion in Iraq, and an EU that is completely absent from what’s going on.

And Brexit approachin­g with unknown impacts on the Maltese who live in Britain, the tourists coming to Malta for sun and the traditiona­l welcome and the commercial and trade relations between the two countries.

The new premier does not have the luxury of a running-in: he must hit the ground running.

All this, and more besides, is all the more reason why the Labour delegates must think of the country more than of the party.

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