The Malta Independent on Sunday

Labour is morally and politicall­y bankrupt

Joseph Muscat and his Labour Party are morally and politicall­y bankrupt. The responsibi­lity for the current state of affairs rests primarily on Joseph Muscat’s shoulder as Prime Minister and Leader of the Labour Party – hence his resignatio­n.

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An architect and civil engineer, the author is Chairman of Alternatti­va Demokratik­a –The Green Party in Malta. carmel.cacopardo@alternatti­va.org.mt http://carmelcaco­pardo.wordpress.com

However, the Cabinet and the Labour Party leadership are, together with Joseph Muscat, also collective­ly responsibl­e for the ensuing mess.

They failed to act when they should have acted when the Panama Papers were published in 2016. At that point in time Konrad Mizzi and Keith Schembri should have been fired on the spot by Prime Minister Joseph Muscat and thoroughly investigat­ed by the police, together with the mercenarie­s at Nexia BT. Yet they were not.

At that point in time, the Labour Party was duty bound to censor its leadership for failing to act. Instead of doing so, it irresponsi­bly shored up the leadership and elected Konrad Mizzi with 96.6 per cent of available votes, endorsing him as Deputy Leader on the 26 February 2016, two days after the Panama Papers saw the light of day. He resigned some weeks later as a result of public pressure.

Why do they act in this way?

The answer was given in crystal clear language by former Labour Minister Leo Brincat when he was being vetted by the European Parliament­ary Committee on Budgetary Control in 2016 with reference to his nomination to form part of the European Court of Auditors. I have written previously about the matter in my article entitled Leo Brincat: loyalties and lip service (TMIS, 18 September 2016).

When Leo Brincat gave evidence he was, as anticipate­d, quizzed regarding the Panama Papers. He made himself crystal clear by saying that he would have submitted his resignatio­n – or else suspended himself from office until such time as matters had been clarified – had he himself been involved.

Brincat further volunteere­d the informatio­n that there had been a point at which he had considered resigning from Ministeria­l office due to the manner in which the Panama Papers scandal was handled in Malta. He added that eventually, however, his considerat­ions did not materialis­e and he did not resign as he had no desire to be a “hero for a day and end up in the (political) wilderness” thereafter.

MEPs then focused on the fundamenta­l issue: what about his vote against the motion of No Confidence in Minister Konrad Mizzi which was discussed by Malta’s House of Representa­tives? Brincat emphasised that he could not vote in favour of the No Confidence motion as he was bound by his Party’s Parliament­ary Whip! He emphasised the fact that this was a basic standard of local politics, based on the Westminste­r model.

As a result of this exchange, Leo Brincat made it clear to the EU Parliament’s Budgetary Control Committee that he had made a very important and fundamenta­l choice: he preferred loyalty to the Party whip to loyalty to his principles: those same principles about which he has been harping on for ages. When push came to shove, solidarity with Konrad Mizzi took priority over adherence to the principles of good governance. This is what irked a substantia­l number of MEPs and prompted them not to recommend the approval of Leo Brincat as a member of the European Court of Auditors as they had done previously, when faced with the nomination of Toni Abela. Leo’s declaratio­n means only one thing: that his voluminous statements on good governance are only lip-service to which there is no real commitment.

The same goes for Evarist Bartolo’s daily sermon on social media in respect of good governance. When push came to shove even Evarist and the rest of the Labour Party Parliament­ary group (including Chris Fearne, current front-runner in the leadership elections), dumped their principles overboard to save their skin.

At the end of the day, the Labour Party – like the Nationalis­t Party before it – is not interested in good governance except as material for political speeches. Labour is morally and politicall­y bankrupt.

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