As the chances of falling below the poverty line across Europe increases, the combined value of the Manchester City football squad is currently 419,615,000 €. Until Manchester City won the Premier league title, the owners spent over 700,000,000 €.
That could buy you a BWSC plant, an inter-connector and the hypothetical new Labour party plant.
Next election vote Sheikh Mansour.
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The UK government is moving ahead with its plan to CUT welfare benefits. David Cameron is coming under increased pressure to CUT pensioner benefits and one idea that has been mooted is the scrapping of the winter fuel allowance while transferring the money saved to the state pension. A 56 member majority voted in a tax that has been described as a “strivers tax”. The new measures curb increases in benefits.
Next election think twice abut the value of your government allowances.
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The leader of the UKIP youth has been sacked by the party after expressing his support for gay marriage on a national radio show. The freshly unveiled nationalist party (Malta) manifest confirms the party position against gay marriage. The wording used in the relevant sections does leave room for misinterpretation though a careful reading will clearly show that the PN puts much store in the concept of cohabitation in so far as same-sex couples are concerned.
They kicked off. The campaigns that is. By some unwritten conspiracy I was meant to leave the island the day it all went into top gear – only just. I was still in Malta when Joseph Muscat’s team went for the mother of all gimmicks and gave us the midnight launch. Did we need to wait for midnight in order to get a three word “slogan” that is simply a tautological confirmation of blandness? Of course we did not.
But Joseph’s party are carried away on the wings of enthusiasm. The theatrical and the dramatic are peaking in this election. It is not only the election of “social media” but also the election that reaps the very harmful work of the PN spin team back in ’08. Remember the campaign based on “taste”? Remember the campaign based on images and persons? Well this is a natural corollary. Labour, ever the unwitting follower, is now banking on just that : image.
Let’s look at the basics. The thrust of the campaign until now (Labour’s, we’ll get to the nationalist one later don’t worry) has been a skimpy idea of unity against divisiveness. After five years of complaining about everything under the sun we now have an appeal of unity and working together for a better Malta (because Malta is everybody’s). The Italians have a word for this attitude : “buonismo”. Suddenly Labour and rent-a-pundits like Musumeci are all into Gandhi style philosophies. Panto has been extended and the buzzword is “Be nice to each other”.
It’s an escape routine. By focussing on the idea that this is politics of conciliation of sorts Labour gets to once again evade the battleground of real policy (we’ll also see in a later post how this business of energy tariffs is anything but concrete).” They’re getting to love it. The fad Obama style campaign suits Muscat’s propensity towards showmanship. Louis Grech, the latest addition to the bandwagon of emptiness, shoots buzzwords faster than a partisan armed with a sten gun.
The nationalist party has replied with a sustained campaign of its own. The ribbon style of mychoice.pn could not come across any more fake than it already had until the official launch. Now we have the page full of testimonials explaining why they would vote PN. It’s choc-a-bloc with wives, fathers and relatives of PN activists, politicians or of people who have an economic interest in keeping the status quo. Why I’d vote PN? Because my husband gets loads of good work off the back of certain projects that’s why. You won’t see THAT written on the mychoice pages.
The PN machine also kicked off by mocking Labour for copying their slogan from British politicians and their logo from Obama. It was bad enough that this was coming from a party that had unabashedly plagiarised Mr Sarkozy’s campaign last time round, we also discovered that this time it was MSNBC and MSN that would be providing the inspiration for the new party campaign logo. Again we got loads and loads of image including Simon and Lawrence looking like a blue version of old pictures of Mao Tse Tung’s communist posters (or Obama – take your pick).
The multiplicity of colours used by both camps is an attempt to appeal to everyone and appear inclusive. Remember the “anything goes” bandwagon of 2008? Well the circus is back in town. We will also be seeing in a future post how the first impressions from the PN manifesto lead us to believe that while someone in the PN is eager to call a spade a spade, the final text of the manifesto still went through some Orwellian revisions (that’s a new fad too) on order to make some commitments appear much more liberal than they really are.
It’s gearing up to be interesting and J’accuse promises many more posts once we have settled back down in the Lux routine. For now we have the Politics Zero. In the meantime do not let the parties faze you with their special effects. Keep asking questions, and remember: everybody lies.
And yes… AD’s logo does look suspiciously like a drunken BP logo…but with AD you know where you stand. Which cannot really be said about our friends at the PLPN shop.
A couple of months ago Simon Busuttil visited the Luxembourg expat community in his capacity as EU MEP. Exceptionally I decided to attend the meeting and had a cordial chat with Simon. I say “expat community” but I mean “Maltese EU institution workers” because there is no kidding oneself here – that is what most of the Maltese community in Luxembourg is about.
One of the issues raised was the question of voting abroad and Simon Busuttil did mention that he was “working on it” (remember – he was still mainly an MEP at the time) but that they had encountered problems in defining the right. Which is when the “Australia” bomb dropped with perfect timing. It always comes up. “What do we do with the expat community in Australia?” Well, I have a few ideas myself but frankly I do find this foot shuffling excuse to be the pits of partisan hypocrisy.
The issue needs to be tackled in steps. I’d begin with the obvious. There are by now hundreds of Maltese employed by international institutions. Their legal status is not hazy – it is rather clear. They do not become residents of Luxembourg, Belgium, Germany or wherever they are posted but rather get into a vacuum that is being a recognised resident for work purposes but not for voting purposes at national level. Which makes sense really. Even the way salaries are calculated for EU civil servants acknowledges the animus revertendi of the workers (the intention to return to their mother country). Part of an EU wage includes an expatriation allowance – paid in order for the employee to be able to return regularly to the country he calls home.
So how difficult can it be for Maltese electoral law to begin by recognising this fact and allowing for such institution workers to (at least) vote in their respective embassies. Not as difficult (or as expensive) as the regular rustle of electoral lists, flight charters and illegal probing into private details by parties surely. Not as expensive as the eco-footprint of the flights that carry the eager voters to their ballots in their home district.
There are no two ways about it. The PL and the PN are firmly entrenched against the idea of allowing voters abroad to exercise their right practically without having to take days off work. Instead they regale us with such beauties as “it is an academic exercise because the law was not changed in time” – who did not change it I ask?
Then you get the genius labour way of thinking: Why should we bother fighting for their rights if they do not vote for us? Based of course on the assumption that all expats are blue-eyed boys (remember Alfred Sant tabling the list in parliament of private citizens who had availed themselves of the charter flight?). Twisted reasoning like this can only be the ugly offspring of partisan politics. Alternattiva demokratika is firmly committed to change this sorry state of affairs and does not do sorry excuses of the Australian kind.
Ah yes. Did I mention the “Australia scare”? It’s a bit like the “wasted vote” on the eve of elections. The parties will tell you that there are over 1 million Maltese living abroad – and do you want them to vote for you? 1 million Maltese eh….We all know the answer to that one – and somehow I think that the bemused Melbourne, Toronto or New York second-generation Maltese would have an answer to that one too. Change the incentive from “free flight home” to a trip to the nearest embassy and we’ll see how quickly voters choose to exercise their right.
Next time you speak of free flights and free holidays think again. You should be speaking of expensive bills chosen by the PL and the PN… because the only ones benefiting from the current system are the same old dinosaurs that you chose to vote for.
It would not be much time before Louis Grech would have to move out of the “pretty face” comfort zone and be obliged to give us a demonstration of his political nous. “From Brussels with love” was his honeymoon period – yet another EU veteran riding on the crest of “the EU wave of doing politics”. We sat through the Christmas period (or rather chomped) and watched the cute fund raising efforts and the truce that never was frittered into thin air.
In the end Louis Grech’s explanation for having been against EU membership sums up to two things : (1) it was not good for Air Malta and (2) there were aspects that could undermine the Maltese financial services industry. Following that, in what is an evidently an effort to feebly justify this sad excuse for a position on EU membership Grech comes up with a prize explanation:
“At my age it is ridiculous to state that something is totally wrong or good, and I believe one may say that it was only on certain aspects of EU membership that there were adverse effects for Malta. But on other aspects, for example the legislation of particular directives or even environmental monitoring, these were positive effects of membership. You cannot see these things as simply black or white.”
“Bravu Cirillu. Ghalhekk jghidulu hekk. Kakka f’qalzietu u mesah fil-glekk!”
Lest I am accused of doing a Normal Vella allow me to point out that the second part of the quote is mine. It’s the tune that resonated in my ears after reading that paragraph of circum tauri. Louis Grech conveniently forgot that this was a referendum. There were two options: either you voted yes – in which case it was Hello Ludwig Van’s 9th and all that – or you voted no – in which case it was back to Tema ’79. Simples. It was not a case of “you cannot see these things as simply black or white”… it was a case of “you have to decide “Yes or No”.
Louis Grech worked out his sums in 2003. He chose no. As a leader or deputy at the time he would have done the same. how do I know? Because he formed part of the movement that worked so bloody desperately to keep Malta out of Europe. Yes, with Joseph Muscat. Being nice to each other does not mean forgetting that these choices were made. Fuck political correctness (excuse my patois) but this is getting bloody ridiculous. Someone has to get Labour in order and get them to shoulder the responsibility of their decisions. What Louis Grech SHOULD have said but didn’t say is much, much simpler. It’s those three words that we find so hard to say in Malta: “I was wrong”.
This is not triumphalism of some Yes to EU camp. In my books everybody won on the 8th March 2003. Even Louis Grech and Joseph Muscat. This is the gauging of a future leader of a party (or deputy) and how he takes responsibility for past decisions. Recognising when you are wrong is just as important as recognising when you were right.
The Malta Labour Party cannot keep shaking and stirring history in this infantile illusion of “everything is all right now – we are all friends now that we are in Europe”. Their position remains ambiguous so long as they do not openly state simply and squarely that their anti-EU stance in the past was WRONG. Excuses about Air Malta or malta’s financial services industry are neither here no there. Nobody ever said that EU membership was not about shouldering responsibility and yes, about making sacrifices.
What is worrying is that Labour still believes that politics can be built on illusions and half-truths. Shaking and stirring is for Bond and his Vodka Martinis. What Malta needs is clear and honest politics. Louis Grech has failed on this first count – and with him the Labour party. Sorry for party pooping but the honeymoon is over.
In tennis they don’t use the word zero when counting scores. They have a fancy name for it – they call it love. Some say that the name came from the tennis courts among the nobles in France when they used to call the zero “l’oeuf” (the egg) thanks to its ovoid shape. A tennis match kicks off at “love all” before moving on to other weird ways of adding up scores to find out the real winner. In any case for a tennis player love is nothing. Zero.
And Labour have got themselves a spanking new deputy leader just in time for the ball. We’ve already said much about how Labour have played to the PN’s tune when it comes to hyping the importance of deputy leaders and their “relevance” in politics and party programmes. We have also seen how Labour’s move is a clear demonstration that there was a moment of panic at the poll readings, that Anglu Farrugia was identified as the weakest link and that Simon Busuttil needed to be countered at all costs.
It is a battle of image and definitely not of substance. The supposed charm that oozes out of the newly anointed PN deputy leader was wreaking havoc with Labour’s plans. Somehow (and surprisingly) the PN bluff about having a “change card” in hand was working. So Labour needed to act fast. What better way then than to call the PN’s bluff? How? Short of cloning Simon they could only get as close fitting a substitute as possible. Enter Louis “Connery” Grech. Charm? Plenty. Affability? Truckloads. Substance? Come again?
For yes. We said it when Simon was anointed and we will repeat it with much greater force now that Labour got their clone. Where’s the substance? Show me the money. Grech shot out a speech about accountability, respect, managerial style and all that FEMA-speech yada we have long been hearing from Joseph. For a bit of added value he stole a few leaves from Franco Debono’s routine about meritocracy. Beyond that we just have image and the spiel about “experience gained in Europe” – Simon Said, Louis Did too.
So do we have anything new in our political constellation? Not really. We’ve got nothing. Love. The mad political extra-time before the end of the year has simply been an appendix of new-style valueless marketing. For now all we get are Simon and Louis… from Brussels, with love.
Jekk tinzerta tkun qiegħed ħdejn xi bajja Maltija taf tara kartelluni li javzaw lil kull min bi ħsiebu jgħum illi “Topless sunbathing is prohibited”. Dejjem laqtitni din fuq ħafna livelli. L-ewwelnett għax għadna iffissati biż-żejża. L-iskop ta’ din il-projbizzjoni ma hix ċara. Hemm forsi skop sanitarju? Jista jkun li l-“awtoritajiet” qed jikkumbattu il-kanċer tas-sider – għax ħafna xemx mhux tajjeb għaż-żejża? Forsi. Jista’ jagħti l-każ ukoll li din hija projbizzjoni oħra minn dawk ibbażata fuq il-pudur ta’ ħaddieħor. Taf int. Forsi l-“awtoritajiet” qed jipproteġu lili u lilek minn xi esibizzjoni esaġerata ta’ mammarji. Big Brother is protecting you.
Fil-verita l-ebda skuża ma treġi. Għax allura għax ma tipprojbix tipjip fil-pubbliku bl-istess raġunar? U jekk se tuża l-iskuża tal-pudur mhux aħjar tgħid lil ħaddieħor iħares band’oħra? L-isbaħ “No Topless Sunbathing” fil-bajja ta’ San Ġorġ mitt metru bogħod mill-“Gentlemen’s Cubs”. M’għandux x’jaqsam ta – it-topless sunbathing mal-Gentlemen’s Club – imma xorta toħroġ idea konfuża tan-normi li jirregolawna u l-mori li jsejsuhom.
Imma barra dan kollu hemm ħaġ’oħra li tittikani. Il-projbizzjoni m’hijiex ibbażata fuq liġi li tistipula espressament li tixxemex b’sidrek mikxuf huwa illegali. Le. Il-projbizzjoni hija interpretazzjoni ta’ liġi li tistipula li tkun “indeċenti fil-pubbliku” huwa reat. Jiġifieri x’imkien hemm kejl soġġettiv illi f’daqqa waħda isir universali. Il-qrati għalhekk hemm qiegħdin – biex jinterpretaw u japplikaw il-liġi … u kulltant per forza maggiore dik l-interpretazzjoni taf biss tirrinforza l-assurd – sakemm jiġi maġistrat u jinterpreta kollox b’mod differenti.
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Smajna li l-Kummissjoni għall-Amministrazzjoni tal-Ġustizzja se tinvestiga lil Maġistrat Demicoli wara l-allegazzjonijiet ta’ Anġlu Farrugia. Qabel inkompli irrid ngħid li żewġ il-Maġistrat Demicoli huwa ħabib tiegħi (għax jidher li għal xi nies din l-informazzjoni taf tkun importanti iktar mill-fatti). Issa il-kwistjoni li għaddejja minnha il-Maġistrat hija proprju kwistjoni oħra li tirrefletti l-assurdita ta kif inħaddmu l-liġi – assurdita li ħafna drabi ikollha l-għeruq tagħha fis-sistema partiġġjana.
Il-Kummissjoni għandha kull dritt (Artiklu 101A (11) (f) Kostituzzjoni):
li tiġbed l-attenzjoni ta’ kull imħallef jew maġistrat fuq kull ħaġa, fil-qorti li fiha hu jkun ipoġġi, li ma tkunx konduċenti għal funzjonament effiċjenti u xieraq ta’ dik il-Qorti, u li tiġbed l-attenzjoni ta’ kull imħallef jew maġistrat għal xi aġir li jista’ jolqot il-fiduċja li għandu minħabba l-kariga tiegħu, jew għal xi nuqqas minn naħa tiegħu li jimxi skond xi kodiċi jewkodiċijiet ta’ etika li jkun japplika għaliha;
Mela sew. Il-Kummissjoni dehrrilha li għandha tara jekk l-aġir tal-Maġistrat Demicoli kienx influwenyat minn xi bias politiku kif allegat minn Anglu Farrugia (li barra li hu politiku hu ukoll avukat). Din l-investigazzjoni tista twassal għal “ġbid ta’ l-attenzjoni” tal-Maġistrata ikkonċernata. Nimmaġina li jiktbu ittra oħra fejn jsemmgħu il-preokkupazzjoni tagħhom dwar bias possibbli. Pero ħaġa waħda ma ddoqqlix. Sakemm ma hemmx xi prova ta’ influwenza esterna (tipo telefonati, tixħim, pressjoni mill-partiti jew Ministri jew xi ħaġa hekk), l-uniku indizju li għandha il-Kummissjoni hija l-kawża innifisha.
Is-sentenza tal-Maġistrat Demicoli hi dik li hi. Kienet waħda motivata u ma ninsewx li peress li qed nitkellmu fuq kamp kriminali qed ngħidu li irid ikun hemm każ “beyond reasonable doubt”. Dik l-istess sentenza diġa ġiet eżaminata fl-appell u diġa ingħataw raġunijiet sostantivi u raġunati għalfejn għandha tinqaleb. Li jinkwetani allura hu li l-Kummissjoni se tkun qed taġixxi bħala Qorti ta’ Appell ieħor. Jew se taqbel mal-Imħallef Mallia u jekk tagħmel hekk ikun fuq punti ta interpretazzjoni legali, jew le. Il-kwistjoni ta’ bias politiku m’għandhiex x’taqsam.
Biex nagħti eżempju fittizju, stajna kellna sitwazzjoni inversa fejn il-Maġistrat sabet lil Bartolo ħati u dan inħeles fuq Appel. Allura konna ngħidu li l-qorti tal-appell hija biased? Skond statistika li qaluli fuq xi 600 kawża appellata xi 200 jiġu mibdula fl-Appell. Dan huwa normali fl-iter legali. Il-problema ma hix il-bias potenzjal ta’ imħallef jew maġistrat imma li partit politiku (jew membru tiegħu) ħass il-bżonn li jkompli jippolitiċiżża il-qrati u jkompli jimmina l-fiduċja pubblika fil-ġustizzja. Deherli li Muscat sewwa għamel li talab ir-riżenja ta’ Farrugia għal daqshekk (ġietux ix-xoqqa f’moxxtha jew le).
Wara kollox għandna kultura miftuħa ta’ Maġistrati u Imħallfin li huma jew ta’ xi kulur jew ta’ ieħor. Mhux sigriet. Ara x’ġara ma’ l-aħħar skandlu – il-partiti jippuntaw subgħajhom lil xulxin “Dak tagħkom… appuntajtuh intom”. Sfortunatament il-verita hi dik li hi. Il-ġudikatura s’issa kienet appuntata biex jitpaxxew il-partiti. Li jiġu issa l-partiti u l-makkinarji tagħhom u jibdew jakkużaw lil min jaqblilhom b’bias politiku jikkonferma kemm aħna dilettanti tal-liġi tal-assurd.
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