Kilba ghall-poter u xejn izjed

Published: June 5, 2009 at 8:50am
Once we become prime miniister our work is done

Once we become prime miniister our work is done

Why is it that you get the feeling the Labour Party and its most avid supporters want to get into government just for the sake of power, and not because they have a plan for running the country?

It’s because you’re right.

And here it is, straight from the horse’s mouth last night on Super One, when he was being interviewed by Miriam Dalli, who was taking a break from studying to become yet another (yawn) lawyer.

Miriam Dalli: “Joseph, mat-tokki ta’ nofs il-lejl tispicca il-kampanja elettorali, pero xogholkhom ma jispiccax hawn.”

Joseph: “Heh! U zgur li xogholna ma jispiccax hawn. Xogholna jispicca la darba jkollna gvern Laburista.”

In other words, once he becomes prime minister his job’s done and he can relax. I suggest Lawrence Gonzi pulls him aside and has a quiet word, or we will end up with a repeat scenario of 1998, when the prime minister literally committed political suicide because he had no idea how to cope.




9 Comments Comment

  1. Anna says:

    Dik il-libsa ma niflahx naraha izjed, specjalment il-hjata migbuda fin-naha t’ isfel u l-hemline. Qisha sejra l-festa tar-rahal. Wardrobe malfunction?

  2. may says:

    Il-libsa tat-‘tinfoil’, nghidilha jien.

  3. NGT says:

    Another spam mail… Profs is now angry that the government did not take his advice…

    When jobs are at risk

    by Prof. Edward Scicluna, timesofmalta.com – Mon 1st June 2009

    ——————————————————————————–

    Prime Minister Lawrence Gonzi is in the unenviable situation where he has left himself no room for manoeuvre to cushion our economy against the ravages of the international situation and save jobs. Instead, he has to start the whole deficit cutting exercise all over again, this time under the direct orders of the European Union through its excessive deficit procedure.

    In his recent outburst against opposition criticism and mine in particular, the Prime Minister lectured his audience on the euro peg but failed to mention that our economic history since World War II reports only two Maltese lira devaluations, one in 1967 and the other in 1992. Both were carried out under Nationalist administrations.

    The Prime Minister referred to the interview I had on timesofmalta.com wherein I had stated that I considered that the present predicament of the economy and public finances were due to two major wrong economic decisions taken in the past. One was the refusal by the Gonzi government to utilise the +/- 15 per cent band around the then existent parity during the ERMII period. This had been suggested by the European Commission.

    At that time, I considered this refusal as “the worst advice the Prime Minister was to be given for many years to come”.

    I had argued that the float within the band during the two years prior to euro adoption would have given the chance to our lira to find its real value against the euro. This would have allowed our monetary authorities to choose the most suitable permanent euro/lira peg, which would have helped Malta’s export competitiveness and the creation of more jobs.

    It was the Prime Minister’s mistake at that time to ignore this advice and trivialise the issue with the infamous devaluation scare. Four years later, on the eve of the European Parliament elections, Dr Gonzi repeats this mantra to deviate attention from the required policy measures needed to take us out of the present economic quandary.

    The second wrong decision was to concentrate solely on deficit cutting to the detriment of economic growth and to carry out this exercise solely by increasing taxation.

    The way we should have reduced the deficit I had spelt out in a paper presented at a Chamber of Commerce conference in 2003 entitled Cutting The Deficit: We Can Do It. I had warned that previous attempts by other countries such as Ireland to cut the deficit by raising taxes would not succeed in achieving sustainable public finances. This was also ignored.

    When the period of euro examination was nearing, as a euro expert appointed by the European Commission, I was given to understand that Malta was failing the stress tests carried out with regard to the debt/GDP ratio. I had reported this in various interviews.

    I had advised that the debt ratio was to be brought down not by the one-off proceeds from privatisation but by more diligent control of public expenditure programmes through appropriate reforms. This would have succeeded in putting our public finances on a sustainable path.

    The real cost of ignoring this economic advice showed itself in our very first year of euro membership. In one single year (2008) we managed to reverse a seven-year stint of sacrifices of deficit reduction through higher taxation. Our deficit shot up to 4.7 per cent, the inflation went up to over five per cent at a time when the whole world was facing deflation, and the debt accelerated its upward climb. This has brought the wrath of the European Union, which has initiated the excess deficit procedure against Malta. The Gonzi government cannot tell us it was not forewarned.

    Finally, as an economist, I have consistently been in favour of euro membership once the much-awaited structural reforms would have been in place. It is sad to note that these much-awaited reforms, notably in health, education and pensions, have failed to materialise in the period prior to EU membership as well as in the period prior to Malta joining the euro. Today, the Prime Minister is still talking about these reforms.

    It is up to the electorate to judge who has indeed weakened the economy and its public finances and put Maltese workers’ jobs at risk.

    Prof. Scicluna will be contesting the MEP elections on a Labour Party ticket.

    http://www.edwardscicluna.com

  4. Yaneka says:

    Imma ghaliex in-nisa iridu jilbsu kollhom xinxilli u l-irgiel jghaddu b’bicca glekk u ingravata?!?

  5. jomar42 says:

    Sant/Gonzi debate….

    Sant: Heqq, inbazwru ftil l’hawn u nbazwru ftit l’hemm….

    Michelle must have been watching….

    Bazwar l’hawn u bazwar l’hemm, fl-ahhar bazwret libsa!

  6. J. Bonello says:

    There are more important issues in this country to deal about, what is wll this fuss about an outfit. Our previous President’ wife was no model to follow, she always seems to be coming straight of the kitchen, just putting on the first dress which comes alone.

    • Johnny Tanti says:

      @ J. Bonello
      You must really be desperate to mention Mrs Fenech Adami. Michelle can only aspire to become the great lady Mrs Fenech Adami is. If you don’t know what to say, just put a sock in it.

      “The truth is incontrovertible, malice may attack it, ignorance may deride it, but in the end; there it is.” Winston Churchill

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