Cuschieri withdraws signature from anti-Cyrus Engerer motion following ‘expulsion threat’
Labour party website Maltastar.com has revealed that Sliema Nationalist councillor Edward Cuschieri would be withdrawing his signature from the motion of no confidence against proposed Sliema Deputy Mayor Cyrus Engerer.
According to Maltastar.com, Cuschieri “will be retracting his signature from the motion of no confidence against the soon to be Sliema Deputy Mayor Cyrus Engerer after being threatened that he would be expelled from the Party if he does not toe the line”.
“The majority of Sliema councillors backed the motion until earlier today, when Cuschieri said he was ‘forced’ to remove his name from the motion,” Maltastar.com insisted this afternoon.
Cuschieri was not available for comment when contacted this afternoon by MaltaToday.
This move came after MaltaToday reported in its print edition this morning that the PN administration had reportedly warned Cuschieri “to back down on his ambition to be appointed deputy mayor, and to expect expulsion from the party should he not toe the party line and support Cyrus Engerer for the post”.
MaltaToday had revealed this morning in its print edition that an infuriated secretary-general Paul Borg Olivier had made it clear with all PN Sliema councillors that “enough is enough” and that the PN would not tolerate any more nonsense.
“Cyrus Engerer has the full support of the PN’s administration,” a senior PN spokesman told MaltaToday yesterday evening, adding that it was unacceptable that Engerer was apparently being sidelined “because of his sexual orientation”.
MaltaToday is informed that Borg Olivier expressed his “full support” towards Engerer, who was expected to be appointed deputy mayor when the council resumed business on 22 September.
The warning came as a calculated risk for the PN, which risked “losing its majority in its most important stronghold”, with Cuschieri signing a motion of no confidence in Engerer along with three Labour councillors and two independent councillors.
“In the case of stalemate, the Sliema council could risk being dissolved by government, and new elections called in a scenario where disillusionment is high among a very demanding electorate,” MaltaToday reported.
Three weeks after the ousting of Nikki Dimech as mayor and his expulsion from the PN following his arrest and arraignment over alleged bribery, the PN was stunned by the no-confidence motion against Cyrus Engerer.
Engerer was an outspoken gay activist. “His frontline appearance at this year’s gay pride, where he was filmed kissing his companion, brought the councillor new attention”.
In an interview with MaltaToday, he had said he would consider voting for Labour if the party would put full marriage equality in its manifesto, saying gay marriage “makes a big difference to me.”
The no-confidence motion – presented on Monday – piloted by PL minority leader Martin Debono, stated that “Cyrus Engerer is still young and doesn’t have the experience to be a Deputy Mayor.”
All three PL councillors were signatories to the motion, “including Nicolai Gauci who is in the employ of former mayor Nikki Dimech,” MaltaToday revealed.
Other signatories were Dimech and Sandra Camilleri, who were now independents, and Cuschieri, who is also a member of the PN sectional committee in Sliema.
His signature upsets the PN’s plans on Sliema, “just a day after Prime Minister and PN leader Lawrence Gonzi spoke at length over the importance of ‘loyalty’ by all councillors and party members.
Contacted yesterday, Debono downplayed his role in the whole affair, stressing that the matter is a “feud between PN councillors.”
But Debono declined to comment on why he was supporting the appointment of a PN councillor for the post of deputy mayor, and abstained from voting out Nikki Dimech and appointing Joanna Gonzi as Mayor.
“It is all a storm in a tea cup, as the whole Sliema issue has been blown out of proportion,” Debono insisted.
Also contacted, Dimech stressed that he supported Cuschieri and not Engerer as deputy mayor on a “matter of principle.”
Dimech accused Engerer of being the prime promoter behind his removal and “manoeuvring” behind his back.
But Dimech strongly denied the homophobic interpretation that was being given to the motive behind the motion.
Dimech claimed he did not know the authors of a Facebook group called “friends of Nikki Gelanz”, but that he “appreciated their support.”
The group posted pictures of Engerer with his arm on the shoulder of a male friend, lifted from his own Facebook profile, and peppered it with messages of a homophobic nature.
“We have nothing against gays but for sure its (sic) dangerous to have you freely do what you want/you should have respect to the other part of the human civilisation.”