Issue link: https://maltatoday.uberflip.com/i/1464865
7 maltatoday | SUNDAY • 17 APRIL 2022 OPINION MANY people are bewildered with the amount of MPs that this year's election has produced. For some, the only benefit they see is that there are more win- dows of opportunities to get something for nothing from the state. Isn't that what ministers and MPs are there for? The impact of the gender quo- ta mechanism struck many. As happens when radical chang- es are introduced, their impact will only have been appreciated when applied, rather than when it was introduced and approved by Parliament. Comparisons have been made with other countries and these have inevitably led to the con- clusion that with a record 79 parliamentary seats, Malta's Par- liament is the biggest per capita in Europe with an MP for every 6,532 voters. More interesting is that there are not enough seats physically for all the elected members in the main hall of the House of Representatives and new rows of seats will have to be put in place in time for the official opening of Parliament. Surely this should have been seen to as soon as the gender quota mechanism be- came part of the electoral law! I tend to agree that something needed to be done to push up the percentage of women in the House of Representatives, but, with the benefit of hindsight, I realise that the adopted simplis- tic system seems to me to have ignored two important points. One is that it is not clear how the law would apply if there were more than two parties in Parliament. ADPD have opened a court case about this issue and while I have no intention to en- ter into the legal niceties of this case, I do agree that the system continues to increase the disad- vantages that the small parties face when contesting the general elections. Whether this situation is actually unconstitutional or not, is for the Courts to decide. The second point – that no- body seems to have made – is that the increase of six seats to each side of the great divide, up- sets the corrective mechanism that was made to ensure that, in a two-party House, the number of MPs in each party reflect the ratio of the votes obtained by the two parties. In fact after the gender quota mechanism was applied, this proportionality was mathematically lost. In other words, the Electoral Commission declared two extra PN MPs through a mechanism that ensures the ratio of the members of the two parties re- flects the proportion of the votes garnered by the two parties. A few days later it awarded six ex- tra seats to each party, thus up- setting the proportion that it had just established! Of course, the Electoral Com- mission was just adhering to the law... and sometimes the law is an ass. In between the two decisions, the Electoral Commission had to organise the so-called casual elections to fill the seats vacat- ed by those who were elected on two districts. These 'elections' tend to muddle the process even more. Is there really any need, today, for candidates to contest two electoral districts? Perhaps elim- inating this possibility will make the whole process a bit less com- plicated. Add to this mess, the bigger issue of handouts for votes, and there should be no doubt that our electoral system should be radically redesigned. Even so, independently of what system we opt for, we need a law that imposes limitations on what governments can do when Par- liament is in recess before a na- tional election is held. This law should also make pro- visions regarding the transfer of power from one administration to another after a general elec- tion. Now is the time for the newly elected Prime Minister – Rob- ert Abela – and the Opposition to agree that the country needs to start pursuing these objec- tives through recommendations made by a commission that will not just be bipartisan, but will also include representatives of ADPD. The more the country dabbles with its electoral system, the more it is becoming evident that we need to opt for a fresh start with a radically new but less complicated and fairer system. I have been insisting for this for years. I am sure it will hap- pen sometime – whether it will be during my lifetime is another matter. The more, the merrier Last Thursday two women MPs were appointed parlia- mentary secretaries by the Prime Minister, completing – hopefully – Abela's list of min- isters and junior ministers. They are Rebecca Buttigieg, who entered parliament by vir- tue of a casual election in the ninth district, and Alicia Buge- ja Said, who became an MP through the gender-balancing mechanism. Buttigieg is the new parlia- mentary secretary for reforms and equality within the Home Affairs, Security, Reforms and Equality Ministry, and Bugeja Said will be parliamentary sec- retary responsible for fisheries, aquaculture and animal rights within the Ministry for Agri- culture, Fisheries and Animal Rights. By the way, Bugeja Said has the qualifications to be a technical – rather than a polit- ical – junior minister. Frankly, I have now lost count of how many ministers and how many parliamentary sec- retaries this country has. With the increase in the num- ber of MPs and the increase in the number of ministers, the cost of administering this mi- niscule island keeps shooting up. Each minister and each par- liamentary secretary must have a secretariat and the inevitable 'customer care' set-up. This is actually a constituency office financed – probably illegally – by the government and actually leads to many abuses to favour voters of the district/s from which the Minister or Parlia- menatry Secretary is elected. I believe the Auditor Gener- al has made some interesting observations about these set- ups... It seems there is no rhyme or reason why the country has so many ministers and junior ministers; except for the Prime Minister to ensure he has the unquestioned support of the majority in the expanded Cab- inet. When I tried to work out add- ing the cost of this garguantan Cabinet with the cost of having 12 extra 'female' MPs getting their honorarium and support services from public funds, I got lost. Eventually this will lead to more Treasury pen- sions, of course! The more, the merrier? Not necessarily... but undoubted- ly the more expensive for the Maltese exchequer. * * * Here's wishing a Happy Easter to all readers and staff at Mal- taToday Full House Michael Falzon micfal45@gmail.com The increase of six seats to each side upsets the corrective mechanism made to ensure that, in a two-party House, the number of MPs in each party reflect the ratio of the votes obtained by the two parties