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MALTATODAY 22 October 2023

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maltatoday | SUNDAY • 22 OCTOBER 2023 9 INTERVIEW Below are excerpts from the interview. Scan the QR code with your mobile phone to view the full interview. It can also be found on MaltaToday's online portal and our Facebook and Spotify pages. Presently, a 16-year- old can vote in a general election but can't contest it. Are there any plans for this to be addressed? It was a Labour government that gave 16-year-olds the right to vote in general elections and other elections. Now we will see what the will of the people is and where that discussion will lead. I look forward to dis- cussions as to whether 16-year- olds should also be able to contest general elections. How- ever, these discussions are yet to start. So there are no concrete plans for there to be 16-year-old MPs? No, we'll work step by step. Now we're discussing this Bill to see that 16- and 17-year-olds can serve as mayors if they're chosen so by the electorate. Let's say I'm a 16-year- old mayor and I can sign paperwork to purchase property in the local council's name, however I cannot purchase property for myself. Is this not a lack of consistency within the proposal? It's good to understand how a local council works. The mayor receives the highest number of votes, and the other members work together with the mayor. Then there is the executive sec- retary and the administration who see that all that is agreed upon within the council is made into reality within the locality. So, when papers are going to be signed there's always going to be the executive secretary working hand in hand with the mayor. Another PL proposal was to introduce the gender parity mechanism inlocal council elections. Why was this not introduced with the draft Bill allowing 16-year-olds to be mayors? The PL's manifesto says that discussions are to be held re- garding whether or not this mechanism can be applied to local council elections. We still need to discuss if this can hap- pen and how this can happen. Don't you think that the mechanism has left the electorate with a bad taste after last year's general election? We still need to see the results of the mechanism despite the discussion that ensued after its use. I look forward to the discussion on this mechanism five, 10 years from now, after the people see what women bring to the table in parliament. The mechanism had problems of its own. We know that Sandra Gauci received more votes than another candidate (Davina Sammut Hili) who got elected through the mechanism. Don't you think that there's an anomaly here that needs to be addressed? I believe that there are points that need to be addressed. For example when we saw the PN force a female candidate not to contest the casual election and instead get into parliament through the mechanism so that another representative was elected. We need to address these anomalies because in- stead of helping women, we're not doing them justice. Howev- er, the public's reaction to the mechanism does not reflect the electorate's response for wom- en in parliament. I think that the electorate is happy that there are more women repre- senting them. With regards to Sandra Gauci I think it's a different issue. She got more votes than another candidate but she wasn't elected, and ironically she's a woman. Don't you think that this should be addressed? I don't see this episode as be- ing related to the mechanism. I think it's more about the elec- toral system and how the big parties are elected, so the num- ber of representatives in parlia- ment must reflect that majority of the chosen parties. So do you think that the electoral system should change to reflect the electorate's wishes? I think that it already reflects their wishes. The number of members of parliament is a reflection of the wishes of the people. I disagree. The surveys show that a lot of people are dissatisfied by the current system. I think that these anomalies that favour the big parties are part of the problem. Don't you think it's time for change? The surveys are not general elections. But the last election had the highest abstention rate in years. I think that's an indication too? But we're talking about the seats in parliament, and the results of the general election mirrors parliament. If other par- ties received enough votes to be represented in parliament, that would have happened. PHOTO: JAMES BIANCHI / MEDIATODAY

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