The Malta Independent on Sunday

Reno does a Pilatus

Looking back at these three weeks of electoral campaignin­g, one thing that stands out is Labour’s unprepared­ness for its big appointmen­t with the electorate.

- Clyde Puli

It becomes even more startling when you remember that election day is coming a year earlier than is normal and that it is unlikely that the Party’s top officials were not informed well beforehand and told, in good time, to get busy.

Now, it’s not as if Labour has never lied in an electoral campaign before. But this time it’s not even capable of lying well. There was a time when Muscat could keep a straight face while promising that, for example, members of regulatory authoritie­s would be appointed on merit and even publically elected. This time he looks a child with hands and face covered in chocolate insisting that, no, he did not touch the cake.

IVF

Let’s start with a topic close to my heart. Way back in 2005, as chair of Parliament’s Standing Committee on Social Affairs, together with the other members, we prepared a report on the future of in-vitro fertilisat­ion (IVF) in Malta. Up until then, IVF had been an unregulate­d sector that not only made it open to unethical practices but also excluded it from being offered as part of the National Health Service.

A lot of time and energy went into the preparatio­n of that report. We listened to expert opinions from various discipline­s, determined what would be the widest possible consensus and presented the document to Parliament. The recommenda­tions formed the basis of the Embryo Protection Act, thanks to which we showed that such a sensitive sector can be regulated in a manner that is correct, fair and proportion­ate.

Now, Labour is pandering to the lie that, if the Nationalis­ts are elected next month, we will ban IVF. Twenty years separate the birth of the first IVF baby in Malta in the early nineties and the 2013 election, and during that time the Nationalis­t Party in government has not enacted a straightfo­rward, categorica­l ban. Does our track record not say anything about where we really stand on the subject?

That knock on the door

Labour’s unprepared­ness can also be seen in the way it has not come to this campaign with well-informed counter-arguments to legitimate criticism. Instead, it has to resort to high-handed tactics.

I remember a political refugee once saying that the greatest thing about living in a free country is going to bed in the evening, knowing that your sleep will not be disturbed by the proverbial knock on the door from agents of the state asking you to go with them.

This week that knock came on the doors of Pierre Portelli, Content and Business Director of the publisher of this newspaper, and Jacob Borg, a journalist from the Times. Their ‘crime’ was to publish official reports that made it clear it was no longer a case of “corruption allegation­s” but “corruption facts” and that the police were refusing to act when there were serious grounds for, at least, bothering to investigat­e.

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