The Malta Independent on Sunday

Beware the Chris Fearne avalanche

All of a sudden, the dark clouds threatenin­g us cleared, the sun came out and the skies became blue again.

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Deputy prime minister Chris Fearne announced he intended to run for party leader. The announceme­nt itself was expected. What was not expected, at least by me, was the avalanche, the tsunami, of favourable comments on the social media.

At long last, so it seemed, the crisis is over. Joseph Muscat is as good as gone and presumably the whole ‘Mafia island’ tag that will be his gift to Malta.

People, Cabinet colleagues, potential rivals had a leadership battle be held, announced they were not running, or that they supported Chris Fearne. There was even talk Mr Fearne would be the sole candidate and thus be proclaimed Prime Minister in time for him to take part in the European council in a few days’ time.

As for Joseph Muscat, the only prime minister since Independen­ce to leave under a cloud, invitation­s were retracted, from Italian prime minister Conte, no less and an audience with the Pope was downgraded to a private audience with no media present. They couldn’t get rid of him sooner.

Soon, for even mid-January is soon, he will be gone with his attendant group, the one he chose to be more loyal to than to the entire country. They will not be missed.

Now this might seem unjust in

Muscat’s regard – the economic growth registered, the lower unemployme­nt numbers point to a success story, so his supporters claim. I am not so sure, and I have been expressing my doubts for months now. For much of the growth was delivered by the passports scheme on the one hand and keeping wages low with the inflow of penniless refugees ready to work at starvation levels. The poor in Malta increased and the Commission’s own surveys as reported on the Central Bank’s Quarterly Review have been in negative territory for more than two quarters. The gaming sector is in a flux, with some big names leaving.

Noel Grima

The banking sector is facing huge difficulti­es with Bank of Valletta being practicall­y under siege by the ECB, with crises facing banks like Satabank and with HSBC de-risking savagely.

The Muscat record will be examined and weighed… and will be found wanting. It was mainly glitter and spin, focused around celebratio­ns such as CHOGM and Capital of Culture, with the latter being completely mismanaged by another of Muscat’s crony appointees.

So, goodbye and good riddance.

And welcome the Fearne years. He is a hard worker and does not take fools lightly. Being a seasoned politician, he will no doubt realise much of the praise he will receive is from people who want to hold on to their packets or from people who aspire to this or that post.

Many, or some, will have dark secrets to hide and will want to hide behind the new PM’s aura. The skein of relations at OPM, uncovered in last week’s court sittings, is an exercise in incest and conflicts of interest. One wonders if, had Fearne to use an axe, would any be left.

But meanwhile his first duty, as I see it, is to speak clearly to the country and promise a new beginning, to infuse hope and to promise reconcilia­tion – not the glitzy type, but the real one. There is much goodwill lying around which must not be wasted.

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