Government by Super One

Published: May 20, 2012 at 8:40pm

I think I’ve worked out why things haven’t been going too well for Labour, and how they’ve ended up painted into several consecutive corners.

The key decision-makers in the party are ex Super One or Maltastar hacks, like the big boss himself, Joseph Muscat, and his sidekick Kurt Farrugia, or still heavily involved in the Labour media machine, like Evarist Bartolo.

Or they have been completely sucked into the netherworld of Facebook announcements, like Anglu Farrugia and Luciano Busuttil.

This means that rather than thinking strategically and mapping out contingency plans for the various possible consequences of what they say and do, or even working out why they should do something and whether their eyes are still on the ball, they think in terms of tonight’s and tomorrow’s headlines.

I’ve noticed that their actions appear to have been conceived with a view to having a high-impact news item for that night and several subsequent nights, but with no solid aim beyond that.

Worse still, the desire for what they think is a good news item sometimes overwhelms what I hope are their better political instincts and ends up getting them into messes, extrication from which is rather difficult.

Real politicians don’t think like party media-machine hacks and propagandists. Their job is different. They have to think long term, map out a strategic course of action and repeatedly ask themselves questions like:

“If we do X, will the consequences be Y, Z or W, and in all three scenarios, where do we go from there?”

“Will doing this help us achieve our aim of getting to X? Will it make things worse, or will it be irrelevant and not worth the effort?”

“Doing X might appear to damage our opponents, but will it rebound and damage us more?”

“Will we have a Plan B if Plan A goes haywire?”

From where I’m sitting, it looks like nobody in the Labour Party is asking these questions or considering the myriad possible consequences of their actions and statements. They’re like a bunch of Super One hacks – well, they were a bunch of Super One hacks – getting all excited because they’ve set somebody up for a fantastic attack-story on the evening news.

But the Super One hacks can move on to another story the next day. The ex Super One hacks who are now the Labour leader and his sidekicks can’t do that. They are stuck with the fall-out of what they do and say.

Take the stupidity of this Richard Cachia Caruana/Partnership for Peace motion, for instance. It is quite obvious that nobody in the Labour Party was actually thinking about the various ramifications or where it might lead them (which is, right now, up the proverbial creek).

It has resurrected the Chinese Cultural Revolution overtones for which the Labour Party of the past was renowned: persecuting by the heaviest means possible individuals who are not to the Labour Party’s liking.

Public servants, bureaucrats and ambassadors do not make policy or take political decisions. Their bosses do that, and the buck stops with them. So if you persecute the underling rather than the boss, you wind up coming across as somebody who trained at Mao Tse Tung’s feet – which is, considering the names and ideological preferences of some of the party dinosaurs, not entirely inaccurate.

Nobody in the Labour Party seemed to have bothered to work out how their actions are perceived, whether or not they now come across as desperate. This was a case in point.

Franco Debono begins foaming at the mouth about Cachia Caruana, and the barely coherent Luciano Busuttil and rabidly anti-PfP (he was the man who pulled us out) George Vella decide that now would be a great time to suddenly remember something they read in a Wikileaked cable almost a year ago.

Seizing the day with Debono’s agitation, they bring a motion before parliament and then panic because what at first seemed like a smart move now looks stupid, the ftira is cooling and they don’t quite know how to deal with the mess they’ve made.

Then yesterday, Evarist Bartolo, the man who would be our education minister if our collective common-sense suffers a major lapse, went on radio to say that people are frightened of Richard Cachia Caruana because he uses the secret service against them.

You have to be nuts to say that about anyone – life is not a John Le Carre novel. And how much more nuts do you have to be to say it when you were once minister of education, are trying your damnedest to become minister of education again, and are on radio to represent the government-in-waiting?

That sort of thing is not just a Wayne’s World fantasy. It is a major libel. But the Labour Party has gone so far down the spout that its politicians are now behaving as though they’re working in the Super One news room with Charlon Gouder and the bouncy mayor of Qormi.

If this is the way the Labour Party is taking its decisions now, a few months away from being in government, then it follows that this is how it will be taking its decisions still when those months have flown past. We shall have Joseph, Kurt and Evarist deciding what to do about any possible fall-out for Malta in the Greek drachma mess based on what tonight’s headline will sound like.

What scares me most is that I know for a fact – because this is basic human psychology – that people who cannot map out simple strategies and risk assessments and contingency and consequences even for something as straightforward as whether to bring a motion before parliament or not will, in a few months’ time, be mapping out what should be major strategies for Malta in the eurozone, for education, for health, and for economic policy.

It doesn’t bear thinking about.




8 Comments Comment

  1. Anthony says:

    What is very, very worrying is that even people like George Vella are making fools of themselves.

    Never mind Joey, Luciano and Byon Jo.

    I have been hoping against hope that there are still a handful of people within the PL who are salvageable.

    I am being proved wrong, it seems.

    By the way. Yet another “cuc Malti” has been appointed chairman of Prudential in London.

    Tonio Fenech, please note.

  2. George Mifsud says:

    @ Anthony

    What do you mean ”even people like George Vella …”? Has the guy ever made anything else out of himself?

  3. John Schembri says:

    After reading your good article I found another “must read” in The Malta Independent on Sunday:

    http://www.independent.com.mt/news.asp?newsitemid=144654

    I was amused by the Emy Bezzina part.

  4. Labour's justice says:

    The Partit Laburista persecutes not only ambassadors and public officers, but even private persons.

    They still have a very distinct communist secret service mentality.

    Which is why I am not at all surprised that Evarist Bartolo made reference to the secret service.

    And there is one NGO which was very close to the Partit Laburista in the recent past, and which is putting repeated pressure on directors of the civil service through the media.

    This is most probably unlawful because it amounts to threatening public officers in the exercise of their duty. Pressure may be made on a Minister, but not on the public officers. Where are the institutions?

  5. JZ says:

    There is an aspect of governance which I find is generally grossly underestimated in political commentary.

    Good governance depends on two factors: clear political vision, and a competent and hard-working civil service.

    The discussion about Labour has so far centred on its lack of political vision.

    I feel that it is also important to gauge Labour’s position on the civil service. It is a known fact that senior management in public entities tend to vote Nationalist due to their educational and socio-economic backgrounds.

    Labour frequently claims that this is so because they are political appointees: barunijiet, hbieb tal-hbieb, klikek, oligarkija – we’ve heard it all over the past 20 years.

    The fact that we’ve steered clear from the financial disasters ravaging the rest of Europe is also in large part due to good management of some key authorities and government departments and effective public policy.

    I’m not only concerned about who will be sitting around the Cabinet table if Labour is elected, but whether they intend messing up the civil service to appoint less competent public officials in senior positions simply because they declare themselves to be pro-Labour.

  6. A. Charles says:

    PAUL MANDUCA, the City fund management veteran, is in line to become Prudential’s new chairman, replacing Harvey McGrath. It is understood the two frontrunners — Sir Nigel Rudd, chairman of Invensys, and Glen Moreno, chairman of Pearson — have dropped out, leaving the way clear for Manduca.
    http://www.thetimes.co.uk

    Mr Manduca is Paul Victor Falzon Sant Manduca.

  7. Jozef says:

    Spot on.

    One example of Joseph’s tendency to gloat on TV was his announcement to the ‘investors willing to put 1billion euros into a power generating plant’.

    It turned out to be John Dalli’s proposal. As soon as the discussion got under way and the odds piled up, Joseph retracted, pointing his fingers at the OPM asking whether this was being considered. When the proponents themselves turned onto the defensive, he chickened out, leaving his energy minister to clean up the mess.

    Planning, analysis, weighing all factors and taking an informed decision in our name isn’t his forte.

    It may sound weird, but he reminds me of Berlusconi, who also served his need to please in the name of popularity. Both seem to confuse consent with media share, and, as we’re witnessing lately, both cannot tolerate any ally they consider a threat to their ego trip.

  8. Manuel Camilleri says:

    https://www.facebook.com/#!/mflscotland?sk=info

    In Scotland the Muslims have joined Labour. In Malta, this is very unlikely since Muscat’s progressive-cum-dinosaurs party is far right in its political views and having Muslims around will not attract the votes of those who are xenophobic or racists.

    Maybe Cyrus and Jason might propose to their model-leader to set up a fejsbuk pejg called Gays for Labour Malta. This will be a great vote catcher.

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