Not signed, not sealed, never delivered

If Labour endorses this socially regressive budget, its new beginning takes us right back to the same place we are in today.

Budget 2013 says as much about the PN as it does about Joseph Muscat. Photo: Ray Attard/Mediatoday
Budget 2013 says as much about the PN as it does about Joseph Muscat. Photo: Ray Attard/Mediatoday

The latest Labour billboard tells us 'GonziPN promises, Labour delivers'. Attractive? Maybe. Inspiring? Certainly not. Just the latest installment of Labour's billboard politics.

The first thought upon seeing the billboard was 'Deliver what?' Labour has no track record in government except the short-lived 18-month stint between 1996 and 1998. It's obviously understandable that Labour is desperately trying to project a positive image of itself as a viable and dependable alternative government, but there is no evidence of this.

Instead of retaining the relatively progressive tax bands or easing the pressure on low-income earners, the Nationalist government chose to reward its own electorate by cutting income tax for the top earners.

Labour's reaction to Wednesday's socially regressive budget was meek and all Muscat could muster was to say that Labour will deliver Tonio Fenech's regressive budget.

Instead of adopting and outlining a Keynesian economic model, the self-declared progressive Muscat endorsed the socially regressive budgetary measures and timidly promised to keep the lower-income earners in mind, once he is in power. Well... thanks! I guess the low to middle-income earners breathed a huge sigh of relief on hearing that.

Muscat's claims that he will uphold all the positive stuff in the EU-approved budget may be an indication that he has no ideas of his own. Others would argue that this could be used as an excuse to exonerate Labour from reducing utility bills in its first year in government.

While Muscat insists that Labour is a responsible party, in the last few weeks he repeatedly warned of the dangers of going into the New Year without a budget: disaster for the country, no more growth, heightened unemployment, and general economic and political uncertainty.

With the excuse that the Prime Minister is tying his budget to a vote of confidence, Muscat has declared Labour will vote against the budget.

Of course no politicians wants to see his country take the kind of risk that could see the country possibly enter recession, so would Muscat rather enter the New Year without budget so that he walk into Castille? Or does he want to stand tall among the moral gnomes who have ran this country for too long?

You can fool some of the people all of the time...

If Labour really is responsible, why doesn't Muscat break with tradition, vote for the budget, and steer Malta away from the risk of recession as he has predicted? Labour should stop hiding and show that it can, and wants to do things differently.

And if a responsible Labour party has no confidence in the Gonzi administration, it should vote for the budget, then table a motion of no-confidence immediately.

It's a move that can do him no harm: electoral victory appears all but secured, and his bold move could only enhance his reputation. Whatever happens in the next few months, only a miracle can save Gonzi's government. The Nationalist Party has proved itself to be tired, arrogant, dishonest and out of synch with the rest of the country and I honestly cannot see it regaining the lost ground.

Otherwise suspicions that Labour's strategy is solely based on the actions of Nationalist MP Franco Debono and independent MP Jeffrey Pullicino Orlando, will only be strengthened.

All Labour wants is an imminent election and face a weak and battered PN. It wants power after having missed a million opportunities.

But what we need is a party that can aspire to be different.

Take the utility bills issue. Had Labour given us the magic formula four years ago, we would have revered Muscat for saving us millions of euros and he would have revolutionised the political landscape by putting country before partisan interests.

Instead he waits for Gonzi to blow the whistle. Only in Malta do the two big parties believe they have a right to govern alone. In Malta's zero-sum political landscape the end justifies the means for Labour and the PN.

At least, spare us the bull about being different. Muscat would have us believe that he is not at the head of a party but that he leads a movement. In reality he is the leader of a rudderless party with no identity or authenticity. Once it is in government it will only mean one thing, a new beginning which will take us to the place we are in today.

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this is the bitter truet regarding maltese partys, if only we could get better represention, then if only pigs could fly.
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Paul Sammut
Jurgen Jurgen, you are either fundamentally politically naive or outright confused. I couldn't possibly believe that you are dishonest. So I would recommend that you read some good biographies of successful leaders political or otherwise and then try your wit at analyses of political strategy. You may start with one as far back as Moses and end with Obhama.
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Micheal Bonanno
Not Amused you're definitely not amused with the PL's stance. But that's the only the way out for our country to exit from this instability and air of uncertainty. As for Jurgen, I'm sorry you're just waving the PN's banner. Certainly a very biased article and opinion piece.
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Before next summer is over, you might be eating your last paragraph. The age of huge political differences is thankfully over. Nowadays, it is the perceptible differences are are paramount.
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Micheal Bonanno
Jurgen, will you stop playing the PN's horn? Nowhere in the world, in democratic countries most all, does the opposition votes in favour in the government! So why do you want the local opposition to be the exception on the excuse of recession? If the PN government was really responsible, it shouldn't have presented a budget at all, but went to the polls as EFA did in 1996! But GonziPN wanted to burden the incoming new government with problems of its own making! Yes, Joseph Muscat is being responsible when he states that he'll be endorsing the best things in the PN budget! But don't worry, he won't do like the PN, and come what may present the budget as is! It's already being said, that there will be adjustments!
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In all this media chaos about the upcoming budget, it is with a big sigh a sigh of relief that there is, at least, someone who can still reason sanely and objectively about this whole circus. The largest anomaly being the PL voting against and yet endorsing the very same budget once they return to power. Hawadni ha nifmek.