The Malta Independent on Sunday

Edward Scicluna has no b***s

Edward Scicluna’s testimony, mid-week, during the inquiry into Daphne Caruana Galizia’s assassinat­ion is outrageous

- CARMEL CACOPARDO

“It is irresponsi­ble for Edward Scicluna to denounce Joseph Muscat’s Kitchen Cabinet now that he is no more Prime Minister.”

Through his own testimony he depicts himself as a spineless Minister of Finance, weak, soft and cowardly, incapable of acting decisively in the face of abuse. As a result, he ends up certifying himself as not being capable to shoulder his responsibi­lities as a Minister.

In so doing he is following the lead of his colleague Foreign Minister Evarist Bartolo. Bartolo, testifying in the same inquiry last month stated that rather than resign he preferred to politicall­y survive to be able to fight another day. He stated this when faced by his Government’s lack of concrete action on the direct involvemen­t of former Minister Konrad Mizzi and Joseph Muscat’s Chief of Staff Keith Schembri in the Panama Papers and other irregulari­ties.

Scicluna’s is not an isolated case. Readers will remember Leo Brincat’s hearing at the European Parliament in 2016 when he was scrutinise­d by its Budget Committee in relation to his nomination to form part of the EU Court of Auditors. When, in view of his statements, he was pressed for an answer by MEPs as to why he did not resign he had replied that he had no desire to be a “hero for a day and end up in the (political) wilderness thereafter”.

Edward Scicluna told the inquiry: “why should I resign if someone else did wrong?” He added that to “enter local politics to perform a job” he had left his comfort zone and a €100,000 job in Brussels as an MEP.

Advising Joseph Muscat to distance himself from the Panama Papers fallout is certainly not enough. Scicluna was definitely aware, even as evidenced in his own testimony, that Joseph Muscat’s kitchen Cabinet was bypassing the system and as a result was avoiding transparen­cy and accountabi­lity rules to better achieve “their aims”. As Finance Minister Scicluna could have nipped abuse in the bud but he did not, as he preferred to compartmen­talise responsibi­lities and stay safe in his new comfort zone.

Scicluna’s responsibi­lities as Finance Minister amount to much more than budgeting for the necessary expenditur­e. Ensuring that all Government expenditur­e is transparen­t and fully accountabl­e is his ultimate responsibi­lity too, irrespecti­ve of which quango, Ministry (or Kitchen Cabinet member) is in charge of any specific project.

The Prime Minister has the duty to lead by example: he should ensure transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in the workings of all his Cabinet members, including those in his Kitchen Cabinet. Whenever he fails to do so it is a duty of Cabinet members themselves to bring him to order or else to resign from Cabinet and take up the case in public. Any Cabinet Minister who fails to so act is an accomplice and collective­ly responsibl­e for the resulting abuse.

No Kitchen Cabinet or shadow government should be allowed to run the country, continuous­ly avoiding the checks and balances which, responsibl­e parliament­s set up to ensure that the taxes we pay are well spent.

It is irresponsi­ble for Edward Scicluna to denounce Joseph Muscat’s Kitchen Cabinet now that he is no more Prime Minister. He should have had the b***s to act immediatel­y that he was aware of Muscat’s Kitchen Cabinet manoeuvres. The fact that he remained in his comfort zone signifies that he is as morally bankrupt as his colleagues in the now defunct Kitchen Cabinet.

Birds of a feather flock together.

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

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