The Malta Independent on Sunday

Perici Calascione elected as PN deputy leader with 90% endorsemen­t

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The Nationalis­t Party elected its new deputy leader yesterday.

Alex Perici Calascione was the sole contender for the post, and he obtained a 90 per cent endorsemen­t by the councillor­s who voted.

There were 1,571 eligible voters, of whom 1,102 cast their preference (71%).

Of the votes cast, 22 were invalid and 1,078 were valid. 104 councillor­s voted against Perici Calascione, while 976, or 90 per cent, voted in favour, the chairman of the PN’s electoral commission Peter Fenech said.

As from this year, the PN will have one deputy leader, reversing the double deputy leadership post former leader Simon Busuttil had introduced in 2013.

Incumbents Robert Arrigo and David Agius did not contest.

In his acceptance speech, Perici Calascione said the PN is coming from electoral defeats and a period of internal strife. It must now turn the page and look ahead to continue battling against a government which transforme­d its victories into arrogance and abuse, for which the people are paying dearly.

He said that the party always believed that righteousn­ess prevails, but this does not come easy. One needs good thinking to plan the best strategies, and the party must work hard to attract the country’s best minds towards it. The party also needs people who dedicate their time to its cause and then make sure that its message is reaching all corners.

He said that the party’s heart still beats for the country. We must look ahead, he said, without damaging the foundation­s on which the party is built, and leaving it to the leaders of tomorrow in a better shape.

Closing the event, leader Bernard Grech said that since he was confirmed as leader, the party has worked in silence to update itself. He said that the result of these changes will be seen in the short term, mentioning internal structurin­g, preparatio­ns for the 2024 local council elections and a branding exercise as some of the areas on which the party has worked.

The party is also re-organising its media and is addressing its financial difficulti­es, he said. Malta needs a strong opposition, because the current administra­tion is taking the country in the wrong direction.

Grech said that inflation was hitting vulnerable groups hard, and the government does not have a plan to tackle it. The government blames the PN, Covid and the war in Ukraine, but never blames itself for its shortcomin­gs in addressing inflation.

He said the health sector is no longer state-of the art, with cancer machines not working and Malta having the worst death rate with regard to Covid. The country’s debt had risen by €3.4 billion in the last nine years. But the government does not want people to hear the truth as it was controllin­g the national media.

Grech added that the government had done nothing to implement the proposals made by three judges who led the public inquiry into the assassinat­ion of

Daphne Caruana Galizia. When the party presented 12 bills to address the issue, the government had voted against, he said.

Another election to appoint two members from the Youth Section on the Executive Committee was also held. The two members who were elected are Jake Scerri Seychell, who obtained 475 votes, and Jean Paul Barbara, with 595 preference­s.

1,571 councillor­s were eligible to vote, 1,091 votes were cast, and 1,062 votes were valid.

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