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MaltaToday 27 April 2022 MIDWEEK

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9 NEWS maltatoday | WEDNESDAY • 27 APRIL 2022 That is why he told councillors "that the reason why he is still here is to offer the best possible outcome in a difficult situation" and that while he has "no divine right" to lead the PN, it is not the time for another "upset" in the party. In short: 'it's either more chaos or me'. And this assertion may not be far from the truth. Aiming for the low-hanging fruit But in a bid to neutralise the perception that he is simply clinging to power, Grech is giving himself a benchmark by commit- ting himself to submit his leadership to another vote if he fails to elect a third MEP in upcoming MEP elections in 2024. And intelligently, Grech has tied his fu- ture to the low hanging fruit, that of win- ning a third seat which the PN had won under Busuttil in 2014 despite losing by a 34,000-vote margin. This raises the possibility that Grech will remain at the helm in the absence of any substantial reduction of the gap between the two parties in elections where the country's government is not even at stake. The Metsola factor Grech may even benefit from the 'Met- sola' factor, which may well facilitate the achievement of this limited target. For with her stature enhanced by her cur- rent role as EU parliament president, Metsola may well be rewarded by a vote of public appreciation even among inde- pendent and middle of the road voters, some of which probably abstained in the last general election. And her presence on the PN list is bound to boost the turnout among PN leaning voters who would otherwise stay at home or vote for a third party. The likelihood of the party winning back the third seat will increase if these voters also continue voting for the other PN candidates on the list. So matching Met- sola with new promising candidates un- tainted with the party's toxic past, will be crucial for the party to win its third seat. For one risk is that a segment of Metsola voters would not transfer their vote to other PN candidates. Perversely, some PN voters may well vote in droves for Metsola in the hope that she will return to Malta as the par- ty 'messiah' – only to end up reinforcing Grech's leadership. For after securing her election to the EP, Metsola will most likely be more interested in a possible confirmation in her present post than in taking over a party with dismal pros- pects of success. In this sense Grech is craftily tieing his future to an election where Roberta Metsola will be the party's greatest asset but without posing a threat to Grech. In fact, the more votes she will attract to the party, the more secure Grech will feel in his position as leader. This would not put an end to speculation on Metsola's future ambitions. In fact, Metsola may well be making the calcula- tion that her best chances locally would be of taking over the party's leadership when it has a real chance of winning, that is, after the party's financial woes are solved and the gap is narrowed in the next general election. In short Grech may still pave the way for Metsola to become Prime Minister in 2032. But that depends on the party narrow- ing the gap in 2027 by recapturing the imagination of voters and presenting it- self as a government in waiting. In fact, an improved performance in MEP elec- tions may give the party a false sense of security. For to narrow the gap in a general election Grech himself needs to show that he has the depth, charisma and vision to turn things around, quali- ties he lacked in the last general election. Where is the vision? But in his speech to councillors, Grech fell short of spelling out anything close to a political vision, which can reunite the disparate block of voters let alone win over new voters. Instead, Grech's land- mark speech was obscured by parallel news that his right-hand man Ray Bezzi- na, was now joining the DB Group – the developers behind the ITS land grab in Pembroke – as a director. This inevitably raised concerns on revolving doors and the party's ties with a commercial group, which the party had criticised in the past as one of the beneficiaries of Labour's land-use policies; this kind of news which validates abstention in elections. Neither has Grech given any indication on future political direction. Grech is right in saying that voters cannot trust the party with the country's finances if it can't even take care of its own finances, and that voters dismiss the party's pro- posals because they think the party is not in a position to implement them. But this does not fully explain the par- ty's disconnection with different catego- ries of voters ranging from ultra conserv- atives shunning any signs of the party moving with the times to more liberal young educated voters who feel that the party is completely disconnected from their values and aspirations. Instead Grech seems to place his hopes in a rejuvenated parliamentary front- bench which may be key to any recovery especially if MPs stop shooting from the hip and operate within a strategy. He is also right in saying that sustainability is a perquisite for a party focused on policy making. But a strategy also needs to be grounded in an overall vision. Instead Grech presented himself as a manager intent on "pruning" the party's tree to ensure its very survival. For while Grech is right in saying that to focus on politics the party needs first to be sus- tainable, the party desperately needs to find a raison d'etre. With Labour repositioning itself as a centrist, big-tent liberal party, the PN remains disoriented and unable to fulfil the aspirations of different categories of voters who have different values and re- act differently to the vast social, demo- graphic and economic changes happen- ing under Labour. For the PN is facing existential problems which remained unsolved ever since the party steered Malta in to the European Union. And it may well be that the party's ideological disconnection is as big a threat to the very existence of the party, as its mount- ing debts.

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