In my last contribution to
this newspaper I had affirmed that our Nationalist Party has an
identifying character which is that of a ‘National’, ‘Christian Democrat’’,
‘Popular’ Party. As such it is not a rightwing, conservative neither
is it a Liberal, laissez faire party.
Neither is it ‘populist’ or worse.
This does not however mean
that the Party has not reached the vote of conservatives, liberals, populists and others, especially, but not only, during
the independence referendum of 1964, and the EU accession referendum of
2003. Although the Party takes its inspiration from Christian
Democrat principles, We have atheist, agnostic and Moslem friends who have voted
nationalist, for various good reasons.
The Party commands a
majority when it reflects the country as whole. But it acts so as to form the
majority opinion which it then represents. The Majority in 1981 was the result
of the opinions ‘formed’ in the long campaigns began from the very first day
after the debacle of 1971.
The consensus within the
Party was achieved, after that the serious dissensions in 1974, in connection
with the agreement which led to the proclamation of the Republic, were healed,
and when Dr. Eddie Fenech Adami was elected ‘Successor Leader’. The strength of
a mass democratic party as ourselves is that it always finds a way out of
serious internal cleavages, through respect of its free democratic process.
Together with some good sense and the balm of common ideals.
We know that we are now
faced with a Government which feels free from many of the traditional ethical
strictures and consistencies. It still calls itself a socialist party, whilst
declaring it is business friendly and perhaps, business oriented; it has
utilized the membership of the European Union it once sought to prevent, in
ways not always consonant with the ideals of the Union; it has had no qualms
about selling Maltese citizenship to a wide variety of people activated by a
variety of motives; it has dealt in a very partisan way (friends of friends) with appointments to some of the highest as well as the lowest positions in
the State.
It has dismissed serious
allegations against some of the members of the Government without proper
respect for sensible public opinion. The ‘spoils’ system has been further
discredited by the way that continuity in many institutions of the State has
been willfully disregarded.
We are faced with a list of
challenges. Our project however is not a simple return to a ‘good’ past. In
1987, we did not return to 1971. Neither will we, in the next general election,
aim to return to 2013. We, as a Nation have to regain the ground lost, but we
also have to advance into areas we had not covered during the leadership of the
last Nationalist administration. Malta was once admired and envied
for its Judiciary, Civil Service, Police Corps, social services,
communications, and the general tenor in administration.
All this, is, substantially
still possible to bring back and maintain, as the damage that the institutions
have suffered since 2013 may still be remediable. It is not, however just
enough to salvage what is still there. We have to apply further strengthening
measures. This is our mission. To this we are committed steadfastly. The
circumstances are adverse but the harder they seem the stronger our
determination to change and remove the rot.
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