I am not being original
when I describe the Party to which I have the honour to belong, as a ‘popular’
party, in all senses of the word; as a matter of fact, it belongs to the family
of European ‘Popular Parties’, and has been,
time and again, during the last hundred and fifty years, the Party,
favoured with their vote by sizeable proportions of the people of Malta
and Gozo .
It is composed, as is the
whole Maltese population, of a ‘mosaic’ of people from all social classes, all areas,
many religious beliefs and from a wide range of ideological inclinations.
Throughout the years of our historical parliamentary experience ( 1921 to date)
it has enjoyed either ‘majority status’ or carried the responsibility of being
the principal minority party.
Its presence in the Maltese
political arena even pre-dates self-government. Indeed it was the
Party agitating for ‘self-government’ before it was the Party that successfully
negotiated our Independence as well as our country’s accession to the European
Union. These are, however, laurels on which our present leadership cannot rest.
Presently, ours is the
alternative, ‘opposition’ party. We do not however conceive our task in
opposition as being merely that of opposing and providing an alternative. We
have again a ‘project of government and governance’ to propose for majority
endorsement.
As with ‘self-government’,
‘independence’ and ‘accession to the European Union’, today our party has a
leadership role; we have to persuade the majority of the Maltese electorate
that our project stands to be adopted. We were successful in
the past, albeit with great expenditure of effort and patience.
Our self-government was
wrested from the Imperial Government, after loss of blood in June 1919. Our
Independence was won without loss of blood but after long years of
agitation, but also by taking full advantage of changes in the world situation.
For more than seventy years the Nationalists had been demanding Independence
before it was finally achieved in 1964.
In the late eighties and
nineties, it seemed that the Government of Eddie Fenech Adami had embarked on
the labours of Sisyphus, in those efforts at persuading, first the Maltese
public, as well as, secondly, the European Union, that it was in both the
Maltese, as in the whole European Union’s, interests, that our country should
form part of that Union.
Our predecessors were not
daunted by the difficulties encountered abroad, as with the diffidence of some
fellow Maltese belonging to other Parties. George Borg Olivier and, perhaps much
less, Eddie Fenech Adami, had also to cope with internal dissidence, but both, in
the course of time, successfully strove on and achieved unity within the Party,
and victory at the polls and in the pursuit of policy.
Notwithstanding this
process, which is normal in popular, democratically
run parties, the party remains, strong and steadfast. It continues to be a mass,
popular party, which necessarily holds within the design of its mosaic, a gamut
of ideological shades of opinions and inclinations within the component tesserae.
The Party however has an
identifying character which is that of a ‘national’, ‘Christian
democrat’’, ‘popular’ Party. As such it is not a rightwing
conservative nor liberal party. Neither is it ‘populist’ or worse.
Because of the principles
we hold dear, as well as fully instructed by the long and varied, political
experience that we have gained, we do not lose heart biding our time on the
opposition benches. Despite the difficulties, we remain committed to the service to our country, as the popular party we have always been.
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