MaltaToday previous editions

MALTATODAY 12 March 2023

Issue link: https://maltatoday.uberflip.com/i/1494707

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 16 of 39

maltatoday | SUNDAY • 12 MARCH 2023 COMMENT Re-reading Roald Dahl IVAN CALLUS INTERVIEW 8-9 The Skinny Malta, shrunk down MICHAEL FALZON Broadcasting conundrum PAGE 7 SAVIOUR BALZAN Now the numbers have gotten serious for Robert Abela PAGE 5 EDITORIAL Simply charmless: a valedictory PAGE 2 JOSANNE CASSAR Stop calling women superheroes. We're simply human PAGE 6 "Dahl may not have got it right in his private life and public statements – the problems there are well known – but the books themselves have a truer wisdom" What are we skinning? The ten-year anni- versary of Labour's ascension into power at the fateful elections in March 2013. Why are we skinning it? Only because it commemorates the most significant shift in Malta's political hegemony after a quar- ter-century rule by the Nationalist Party... Ten years, huh? Yep, a decade of 'taghna lkoll'. Do you feel included in that mix? Of course I'm included. We all are. Whether we like it or not is another matter entirely, though. Gosh, between one political scandal over another and a pandemic in between, it feels like a lifetime. Nothing makes the time fly by like epochal historical events happening around you while you're eating breakfast, stuck in traffic or waiting in line for your turn at the supermarket till. Now that I look back on it, 2013 was also the year Disney's 'Frozen' came out. And that would have been the only significant development that year were it not for the brazen success of the Muscat administra- tion's infamous 40k win. Yes, the electorate finally told the PN to 'let it go', and that was that. It feels as though that seems to still be the reverberating im- prection from even those most sympathetic to the Nationalist cause... How do you mean? While Labour's turbu- lent and troubled decade left countless scars in its wake – both for the country in general and the party in particular – its majority continues to reign on virtually un- challenged by dint of the PN being stuck on old, broken-record preoccupations. But the Vitals/Steward scandal was un- covered through the efforts of a PN MP... And I would argue that that's the exception which proves the rule. The PN could have targeted Labour's concrete (pun intend- ed), specific and material shortcomings for quite some time, in favour of campaigning on moralistic abstractions, and cleaving to the antiquated and extreme elements of their conservative legacy. Ah well, I guess we'll have to lean back on civil society to do the work of resisting government. That places an unfair burden on what is essentially a group of voluntary organisations which could eventually be worn down. We need a dedicated Opposi- tion that convincingly takes the govern- ment to task, and at the very least ensures that the better angels of the Labour legacy prevail over the worst of its misguided ex- cesses. The thing is, when we're talking about Labour's decade here, we're mainly talk- ing about Muscat... In many ways, it feels like the adrenaline surge of the Muscat ad- ministration has now – perhaps inevitably – given way to the hangover management phase that has fallen on Abela and cabinet. And who better to cure a hangover than a former bodybuilder, right? No amount of proverbial protein shakes will wash away Abela's promise of serving as a 'continuity' candidate for the Muscat legacy, though. To say nothing of his key role as Muscat's former legal advisor. Indeed, it is Deputy Prime Minister Chris Fearne who appeared to offer both a clean break from the Muscat era, and a return to an old-school Labour Party free from fevered fantasies of a Dubai in the Mediterranean. That seems off the cards for Abela as well, though. The pandemic and the war against Ukraine would have thrown a wrench into the plan anyway. Neither has Abela pub- lically distanced himself from the Muscat legacy, and he insists on safeguarding the top-of-the-food-chain status quo of the construction industry, for example. So can we look forward to a decade of 'more of the same', then? We seem to be cursed to live interesting times, so a point- by-point repeat of the PN years is unlikely. More's the pity. Yeah. Would have loved to see what Labour's equivalent of the 'arlogg tal-lira' incident would have been. Going by their established metrics – i.e., a preponderance for nouveau riche excess- es – the illegal construction of a golden clocktower on ODZ doesn't seem too much of a stretch. L-Aqwa Zmien, indeed. Do say: "It's trite to simply say that the La- bour government's return to power could be characterised as 'both good and bad'. What it heralded was an irreversible change in the country's political, economic, and cul- tural fabric. While for the most part it seems to have enacted the projected desires of its electorate, neither is the dubious genie of some of its more narcotic tendencies going back into the bottle ever again... for better or for worse." Don't say: "The oil scandal rocked the Na- tionalist administration 25 years into their legislature... Labour managed to pack in roughly half a dozen of the things in a mere decade. That's what I call 'getting things done'!" No. 182 - Ten Year Labourversary

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of MaltaToday previous editions - MALTATODAY 12 March 2023