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MW 21 February 2018

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maltatoday WEDNESDAY 21 FEBRUARY 2018 News 2 IT has been described by party insiders as a U-turn but Joseph Muscat's statement last Sunday that he will not stop half way was intended to assert his leadership over the next 16 months. Muscat did not retreat his promise to leave before the next general election but he did rekindle the hope among Labour supporters that he may yet change his mind. That hope was extinguished in an in- terview Muscat gave on Radju Malta 2's Ghandi Xi Nghid a fortnight ago. The Prime Minister emphatically told his in- terviewer that he intended to go, words that were interpreted by party insiders as having "blown the whistle" on the leader- ship race. The interview with Andrew Azzopar- di was one of those rare instances where Muscat let slip some- thing without evaluating fully the repercussions. In the week that fol- lowed there were rumblings in the party that Muscat may even choose to leave as early as summer and po- tential successors started evaluating their options more earnestly. This newspaper is informed that Deputy Prime Minister Chris Fearne or- ganised a meeting for his helpers. It is an open secret that Fearne harbours the am- bition to contest the PL leadership when the vacancy arises and he also has a well- organised set-up of canvassers. Although the meeting may have been nothing out of the ordinary, party sourc- es said it may have come too close for comfort. "A meeting for helpers is not a rare oc- casion but it came soon after Joseph Muscat signalled his intention to leave so clearly, which may have nudged the Prime Minister to re-think his strategy," party sources said. But it was not Fearne's meeting of help- ers alone that made Muscat map out his personal roadmap a mere week after cre- ating uncertainty on his future. On Sun- day morning, MaltaToday reported party sources saying the leadership race would kick off slowly and silently in the wake of the Prime Minister's radio comments. Muscat must have realised that a prime minister with an expiry date will lose legitimacy among peers as they start searching for a potential successor. He risked losing his grip on ministers despite enjoying immense support at grassroots level. By insisting that he will lead the party in next year's European Parliament elec- tion, Muscat quashed rumours of an ear- lier than expected departure. But he also made it clear who is in charge, at least un- til June 2019. A succession plan There is also the personal scenario in all this. With the Prime Minister harbour- ing ambitions for a top European post in the months after the EP election, he could not afford being seen as having lost the grip on his own party. Muscat leads one of the few successful political parties in the family of Socialists and Democrats in Europe. Since being elected leader in 2008, Muscat has won two general elections with emphatic margins, led the PL to victory in two EP elections and obtained absolute majorities in four rounds of lo- cal elections. His record is unparalleled in Europe and Muscat will want to repeat this success in the 2019 EP election. It may not be enough to put him in pole position for the EU's top posts – Daphne Caruana Galizia's assassination will re- main a dark cloud hanging over his ad- ministration – but electoral success is certainly something Muscat will want to flaunt, especially within the socialist group. On Sunday, Muscat also gave the direc- tion he would like the PL to follow into the future. "A movement that governs rather than administers is not Joseph Muscat's men- tality but the mentality of our movement and this is the legacy we leave behind," the Prime Minister told his supporters. It was a not so subtle hint on the quali- ties he would like his successor to have. V18 chairman Jason Micallef, a former PL secretary general, captured the mo- ment succinctly in a Facebook post when he suggested that a successful po- litical leader like Muscat will put in place a succession plan. "Stupid is he who believes that a prime minister and a politically young leader, who achieved so much for his party and the country, will exit the scene and leave everything behind him without having a plan in the party's and country's best interest. Whoever, because of personal ambition, believes otherwise is only showing that he has no idea how these things work," Micallef wrote. Muscat sought to focus his party's ef- forts to clinch one more electoral vic- tory next year and with party supporters still thirsty for more success, no one will want to appear putting a spanner in the works. For the time being the leadership race will have to wait. ANALYSIS A Prime Minister with an expiry date is not a good idea Joseph Muscat first created uncertainty and then moved to quash it by making it clear that he will lead the Labour Party into next year's European Parliament election. KURT SANSONE tries to understand why the Prime Minister felt the need to outline a partial roadmap IT has been described by party insiders as a U-turn but Joseph Muscat's statement last Sunday that he will not stop half way was intended to assert his leadership over the next 16 months. Muscat did not retreat his promise to leave before the next general election but he did rekindle the hope among Labour supporters that he may yet change his mind. That hope was extinguished in an in- terview Muscat gave on Radju Malta 2's Ghandi Xi Nghid a fortnight ago. The Prime Minister emphatically told his in- terviewer that he intended to go, words that were interpreted by party insiders as having "blown the whistle" on the leader- ship race. The interview with Andrew Azzopar- di was one of those rare instances where Muscat let slip some- thing without evaluating fully the repercussions. In the week that fol- lowed there were rumblings in the party that Muscat may even choose to leave as early as summer and po- tential successors started evaluating their options more earnestly. is informed that FLIGHTS to and from the Malta International Airport (MIA) were temporarily suspended on Tuesday after a small fire broke out at the Malta International Airport. MIA said that in total, 16 flights were af- fected by the disruption. "The fire at Malta International Airport has been located and extin- guished. The team is now focused on the recovery plan, in order to bring operations back to normal as soon as possible," MIA said after the incident. The terminal was evacuated as fire fighters located and extinguished the fire, with members of the Civil Pro- tection Department, Armed Forces, Police and Health Department all on site to deal with the situation. No in- juries were reported. Home Affairs minister Michael Farrugia, who was on the scene, said the fire was caused by a fault in an aquarium pump room situated be- tween the Schengen and non-Schen- gen areas at the airport, leading to smoke entering both the arrivals and departures lounges. This was later confirmed by a spokesperson for the airport. MIA said an official inquiry had been launched to establish the exact cause of the fire. Airport fire causes evacuation, flight disruptions

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