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MW 14 May 2014

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maltatoday, WEDNESDAY, 14 MAY 2014 News 4 PHOTOGRAPHY BY RAY ATTARD Leaders play to the electoral script in TV debate MATTHEW VELLA PRIME Minister Joseph Muscat and Opposition leader Simon Bu- suttil deviated little from their electoral scripts yesterday on PBS's Reporter, where presenter Saviour Balzan hosted the two leaders in a quick-fire question-and-answer debate. Perhaps the novelty of the debate was the (rather understated) an- nouncement that Muscat's govern- ment had finally signed the "com- plex" LNG purchase agreement with the ElectroGas consortium on Friday. Busuttil scoffed at the news, saying the prime minister was more willing to announce a 2c decrease in fuel prices via press conference, rather than the natu- ral gas plant deal. Muscat however reminded Bu- suttil of his party's mockery of Labour's energy plan back in 2013. "You said this was an 'Alice in Wonderland ' project, but here we are today signing the contract." Muscat set store in defending his government's job creation record, telling Busuttil he had created nine jobs for each new jobless per- son, but the Opposition leader was adamant about the rising levels of unemployment. "Our priority remains job crea- tion," Muscat said. "There is still more to do: what I know is that we have given free childcare, paying back VAT paid on car registration tax, and decreased utility bills. And for the first time ever, there is a government that has not waited five years to deliver on its pledge to reduce income tax," Muscat said. Busuttil raised various economic concerns throughout the debate. "Under this prime minister, un- employment has increased every month; the deficit has increased; and the national debt increased by 3%; and there are questions on the suffering retail trade. Statistics show exports were down in these past two months." Muscat again referred to previ- ous claims by Busuttil, in which the Opposition leader had claimed a Labour government would drive the country to a bailout. "We are not heading towards a bailout. We are working on unemployment with a national employment pol- icy, to see that those people who do not have enough skills for those jobs currently being taken up by foreign workers are given those skills necessary to take up these jobs." The prime minister defended having shown his "personal soli- darity" with former MEP candi- date Cyrus Engerer, whose acquit- tal on the vilification of a former boyfriend was overturned by an Appeals Court. Instead, Muscat used it as an oc- casion to remark that "unlike the previous administration", there had been no interference in the course of justice – referring to the fact that the Attorney General had decided to appeal the acquittal of the Labour candidate back in July 2013. Busuttil pulled no punches, ac- cusing Muscat of having "chosen wrong over right". "He is defending a criminal," Bu- suttil said of the former PN deputy mayor, who was accused by his former boyfriend in a police re- port of having used pornographic images of him and of sending them to his employer. "Engerer parades himself as a champion of gay rights and has now been found guilty of a homophobic action. For the prime minister to defend someone like him, who chairs the LGBT consultative council, is un- acceptable." While Busuttil claimed he would "instantly sack " any of his mem- bers found criminally liable, Mus- cat accused him of ignoring simi- lar incidents with two of his MPs. There were not identified by Mus- cat, although his party last week mentioned Claudio Grech for his police card forgery back in 1996. With the Broadcasting Author- ity guidelines offering some el- bow room to the green party, in a pre-recorded intervention, Alter- nattiva Demokratika chairperson Arnold Cassola accused both the European People's Party and the Socialists & Democrats in the EP of having ignored the need to re- form the Dublin convention, for member states like Malta who suf- fer the brunt of asylum claims in the south. "The greens' manifesto calls for a change in the Dublin rules that keep migrants in member states where they first enter. Both Jean- Claude Juncker and Martin Schulz did not propose this in their mani- festos in a bid to satisf y their own electorates in larger countries." Muscat described Martin Schulz, the candidate for the European Commission presidency, as some- body who had a plan for immigra- tion and for a system of legal mi- gration to the EU. "He proposes what Malta needs," Muscat said. Busuttil countered, telling Mus- cat that Schulz did not agree with his government on his attempted pushback of 40 asylum seekers back in 2013. Muscat also defended the bipar- tisan agreement against the in- troduction of the financial trans- actions tax, which would lev y a miniscule percentage on capital transfers. But Cassola said the FTT was a tax on speculation and one that could generate millions for hos- pitals and schools, and which could be introduced gradually and through a transitional period. Busuttil also set much store in at- tacking Muscat's governance, say- ing the employment of his wife's business partner as an MTA rep- resentative in New York and ener- gy minister Konrad Mizzi's wife as trade envoy to Asia, had put paid to his call for meritocracy. Muscat accused Busuttil of play- ing down the fact that he had re- tained people favoured by the former Nationalist administration – namely PBS's chief executive Anton Attard and former TV host Lou Bondì ¬– on the national fes- tivities committee. "Busuttil says my government has no right to pick people we trust, while the PN gov- ernment could choose whomever it wanted," Muscat said, as the two leaders traded barbs on the con- sultancies Busuttil was paid by the former Nationalist administration for his legal services. Muscat attacked Busuttil for ab- staining on the civil unions bill, but Busuttil said the PM had re- fused to separate civil unions from gay adoption in a bid to exploit the Opposition. "I don't take decisions according to populist concerns," Busuttil said. "I take them ac- cording to what I feel is right and wrong in my conscience." "I told the Prime Minister to al- low us to vote separately on these issues, because we believed that society was not ready for gay adop- tions. I am ready to take responsi- bility for my decision. I hope the Prime Minister will bear his share of the responsibility." Muscat however disagreed with suggestions by Busuttil that gay adoption was not part of the man- ifesto. "It is a question of princi- ple that we keep our word. Every- body knew what my position was. I changed my view when I heard different voices on the matter." Download the MaltaToday App now Prime Minister Joseph Muscat and Opposition leader Simon Busuttil on last Monday's edition of Reporter

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