The Sunday Times of Malta

Three former MPs to run for local council seats

PN lines up Ċensu Galea, Kevin Cutajar, PL presents Anthony Agius Decelis

- MATTHEW XUEREB

The Nationalis­t Party has approved former minister Ċensu Galea and former Gozitan MP Kevin Cutajar to contest the local council elections in St Paul’s Bay and Xagħra, in its efforts to win majorities in the two localities.

Sources close to the Nationalis­t Party said two former MPs are “vote magnets” and could help the party attract more votes that could swing the council in the PN’s favour.

They are not the only former MPs eyeing a position within local councils: former Labour parliament­ary secretary Anthony Agius Decelis will also contest the local council elections in Mosta, his home town.

As revealed by Times of Malta earlier this month, PN is heading towards the June 8 elections with two main targets: a third seat in the European Parliament and overturnin­g majorities in at least five councils including San Ġwann, Mosta, Valletta, Siġġiewi, St Paul’s Bay, Mellieħa, and Birkirkara.

In the last round in 2019, the PN achieved just short of 600 fewer firstprefe­rence votes than the Labour Party in St Paul’s Bay. Sources said residents are generally dissatisfi­ed with the performanc­e of the Labour-led council in the past five years, so the PN is trying to regain the majority it had in the past.

In Xagħra, Labour beat the PN by almost 1,000 first-count votes in the locality that was always a Labour stronghold. Cutajar served as a councillor in Xagħra and received almost 800 first-preference votes in the 2019 council election, almost 300 more than the Labour candidate who was eventually chosen as the mayor.

Galea, 67, has strong roots in St Paul’s Bay and his daughter, now a PN MP, served as mayor of the locality before she was elected to parliament.

He started his political career as secretary of the Nationalis­t Party Club in St Paul’s Bay. Between 1978 and 1981, he served as secretary general and president of the Youth Section of the Nationalis­t Party.

An architect by profession, he first contested the general elections in 1981 but failed to get elected. He was elected member of parliament in the general elections in 1987, 1992, 1996, 1998, 2003, 2008, and 2013.

He served as a parliament­ary secretary, shadow minister and then minister in various administra­tions throughout that time, as well as deputy speaker.

For Cutajar, running as a Xagħra local council candidate represents a return to his political roots.

The lawyer served on the Gozitan town’s council uninterrup­tedly between 2007 and 2019, when he was co-opted into parliament as an opposition MP, following the resignatio­n of David Stellini.

Cutajar then sought re-election in the 2022 general election. He placed third among his party’s candidates, coming behind elected MPs Alex Borg and Chris Said.

Agius Decelis was among the biggest casualties of the 2022 general election, when he failed to get re-elected after a 14year career in parliament as a Labour MP.

In 2020, Prime Minister Robert Abela had left him out of his new cabinet, but he had vouched to continue working for the party. Within two months, he was appointed non-executive chairperso­n of the State-run Grand Harbour Regenerati­on Corporatio­n.

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 ?? ?? From left: Kevin Cutajar, Ċensu Galea and Anthony Agius Decelis.
From left: Kevin Cutajar, Ċensu Galea and Anthony Agius Decelis.

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