The positive aspects of coalitions
In concluding its derisive critique of coalition governments, The Malta Independent editorial (January 28) rhetorically asked, "Do we want Malta to become like Italy?" Though The Times leader of the same day echoed the same fallacies about the "dire consequences due to the inherent 'instability' of coalitions", it effectively invalidated its own misconceived notions, as well as those of The Malta Independent, by prefacing its claims as follows: "Italy enjoys one of the highest Gross National Incomes per capita in the world ($31,000). Its men folk have a life expectancy of 77, its women, 83".
Given the choice between a standard of living of that excellence and a quality of life of that calibre, who would sanely opt for rigid autocratic rule, assuring yet more of the same woefully low standards perpetuated by the execrable incompetence of "stable" single party governments in Malta, of whichever political hue?
Real change, however, can and does happen.
Despite European Community membership, the Republic of Ireland was an economically depressed, stagnant country throughout the 1980s, chronically beset and destabilised by a highly divisive national fixation on absolute majority single party rule which inexorably led the country nowhere.
Ireland, frequently but fancifully cited as the exemplary success story to be emulated by Malta, has since emerged as the much extolled "Celtic Tiger".
So, how did Ireland's remarkable "reversal of misfortune" come about?
Ireland is, like Italy, a coalition-administered nation that continues to reap significant, sustainable economic and social benefits deriving from the collaborative commitment and steadfastly responsible Green Party participation in government.
Ireland now boasts the second highest per capita income of any country in the EU and fourth highest in the world based on measurements of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita.
Can Maltese and Gozitans, therefore, really afford to be routinely gripped by the extreme unsteadiness, uncertainty and instability of recurrent "election fever", spawning economic paralysis and administrative atrophy for a year and more prior to general election outcomes, just because they are traditionally expected to result in exclusionary, "we-win-big: you-lose-huge", absolute majorities?
Given that successive coalition governments have achieved such spectacularly fruitful results in Italy and Ireland, imagine what this nation could similarly accomplish by authentically embracing a genuinely "new way of doing politics"; that of enlightened consensus governance, and a truly reforming change for the better.
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Harry Vassallo
Feb 1st 2008, 13:50
Tonio Sammut does a great disservice to the PN and to the MLP. He describes them as completely unable to stand up to a Green minority in a coalition.... on anything. I have more respect for them myself. It will have to be give and take and we had all better get used to it.
Which coalition partner? It is really up to them. We serve those who support us and we will certainly deliver on what we promise them. Our coalition priorities will be published tomorrow. Lesser evil voting gives voting what they do not want when they succeed in not getting lumbered with what they absolutely do not want, Tonio Sammut makes it clear that we Greens will have a walkover in delivering what they do want.
Tonio Sammut
Jan 31st 2008, 23:43
I think that Malta' s case is different. We cannot get the advantages Oisin Jones-Dillon is mentioning. What the greens are after is to be the sole rulers of Malta's administration. If they manage to elect a member in parliament, and the other two parties elect the same number of candidates, the greens would be in a position to dictate their way on the governing party. They will hold the decisive member and can support or cause a government to resign at their whim. Another question i would like to ask: if the above situation should become real, have the green party ever declared which party they would support. We humbly wait for an answer.