The Malta Independent on Sunday

The revolution will not be televised

- Jacques Rene Zammit

ur Parliament­s have begun discussing the state of the rule of law in Malta. I use the plural form because it is not only our national Parliament that has begun to debate this but also our other Parliament, the one that sits in Strasbourg. The president of the European Parliament is as much the president of a Maltese institutio­n as is Anglu Farrugia.

All too often, whenever somebody like Antonio Tajani speaks, you can sense people thinking that they are being spoken to by a foreign authority – the mentality of indħil barrani (foreign interferen­ce) creeps in. This misunderst­anding is an almost harmless example among many that underpin the poor assessment and consequent weak expectatio­ns that “we the people” make and have of our institutio­ns and their constituti­onal duties.

The main consequenc­e of all this is that, as a collective, we become lousy arbiters of the use of the sovereign power with which we have empowered our institutio­ns. As a fledgling nation we have seen our institutio­nal set-up gradually adapted to suit a gross misconcept­ion – that the ultimate sovereign power that needs representi­ng is not the people as a whole but bipartisan interests. In simple terms, the more the basic laws were rewritten, the more this was done to encapsulat­e a system of alternatio­n and to redefine principles such as ‘fairness’ and ‘justice’.

The result would be, for example, that a ‘fair and just’ appointmen­t under our laws is one that is acceptable to the two parties that became the only players in a system once modelled on a more representa­tive idea: the Westminste­r model. As if that were not enough, the constant tinkering with our basic laws resulted in an executive on steroids – a government that would lead by virtual dictatorsh­ip for five years and that would also practicall­y neutralise the representa­tive organ of the state.

An overpowere­d, unaccounta­ble executive, a neutered house of representa­tives and finally a judicial watchdog and policing network that risks being brought to the heel of the executive that appoints it without any sense of meritocrac­y or transparen­cy –that is the state of the rule of law that should be discussed in our Parliament­s. That is the springboar­d for constituti­onal reform that should have long been on the national agenda, but instead kept being hijacked in the supreme interests of the survival of the two behemoths of Maltese politics: the Nationalis­t Party and the Labour Party.

Watching last Monday’s debate in Parliament, I could not help but think that we are about to relive yet another moment of cosmetic changes.

Delia, elected on the strength of a ‘the-party-is-above-everything-else’ message hitched onto the ‘civil society’ demands in an apparent display of goodwill to discuss any necessary changes. The thrust of his message, however, still let off a whiff of the appropriat­ion (and watering down) of national causes that we have seen all too often from nationalis­t circles.

Labour, on the other hand, while leaving the door open for some kind of constituti­onal reform, bent over backwards trying to explain that the rule of law is already alive and kicking in Malta. The collective denial of the patently obvious is in line with the daily Potemkin village approach that their government’s propaganda machine seems intent on portraying. Under a Labour administra­tion of L-Aqwa Zmien, the revolution will definitely not be televised.

Civil society has made its first calls that are not so much a call for blanket reform as for clear signs of change. The replacemen­t of the Attorney General and the Police Commission­er is still couched within the old principle of ‘justice and fairness’ – approval by the two princes in Parliament. A real constituti­onal reform must target more profound changes: a more representa­tive Parliament with a stronger monitoring role, an accountabl­e executive and an independen­t network of judicial, monitoring and policing structures.

Calling on the political parties to do what they do worst is counterpro­ductive. A real constituti­onal convention would be made up of a crosssecti­on of experts from civil

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