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'Opposition trying to please everyone'

Deputy Prime Minister Tonio Borg denied yesterday in Parliament that the Rent Reform Bill would lead to an element of neo-liberalism in new lease agreements. He said that although the government appreciated the opposition's overall approach to the Bill, it was running with the hares and hunting with the hounds, going against its own past pronunciations on principles and seeking to please everyone.

The government intended to accept some of the opposition's amendments in committee stage, but others would not be accepted.

Disagreeing with Dr Muscat's comments, Dr Borg said the Bill was a balanced one. It upheld the right of continuity not only for a surviving spouse but also for surviving children collectively. It also favoured siblings, with reservations. The government had consulted widely in order not to create injustices but at the same time pre-empt abuses that would never let the owner get his property back.

It was wrong for the opposition to say that the government was allowing only a short period of transition. Commercial leases were being left to run on for 20 years. The opposition needed to speak about practice, not theory. It could not run with the hares and hunt with the hounds, putting the onus only on the government. It was not true that there would be an element of neo-liberalism in new rent agreements.

Dr Borg said that with this Bill the government was also looking after the rights of those really needing protection. A PL document in August had said it was against any marriage that was not between a man and a woman, but now the opposition was charging that the government had forgotten same-sex couples in the Bill.

Did the PL now want to help same-sex marriages too? Was it advocating a cohabitation register? Did it want to help a person who decided to cohabit after being widowed?

Dr Borg made it clear that the government appreciated the opposition's overall approach to the Bill. Some of its proposed amendments would be accepted, but others would not. The Bill was as clear as possible, but of course there would continue to be conflicts because property costs money.

Dr Muscat had clearly been speaking to the gallery when he said that requisition orders were gone forever. This had happened only when the Nationalist administration of 1995 had deprived itself of the wide-ranging powers of requisition. On its part, the MLP had financed itself by abusing such orders, requisitioning private property that to date was still occupied as PL clubs.

The Nationalist administration had even been criticised in 1995; now it was being accused of championing the rights of owners.

Dr Borg said that the reform currently underway was balanced because it took into consideration both owners' and lessees' rights. The minimum rent of €185 euro for current residents would be increased by the rate of inflation every three years. This arrangement was absolutely fair, even though the government was being criticised for not being bold enough in favour of owners.

The government was seeking to protect not only owners but also commercial lessees, but there necessarily had to be limitations. A lessee's children could inherit the rent, but should those children benefit in this way even if they were well off with an income that was much higher than the owner's?

He said the Bill was not perfect, but the wide consultation that had taken place had even found the approval of the opposition, as Dr Muscat had said. The Bill was as just as possible.

Dr Borg said anyone could appreciate how just the Bill was even by its provisions about maintenance. Under the present regime, maintenance of rented dwellings was tantamount to a complete social service on the back of the private sector. There were thousands of owners who went into a state of panic whenever they received official letters from well-off tenants demanding maintenance works. The government had found the courage to say enough was enough, and whenever the owner did have to foot the bill for maintenance the rent should increase by six per cent. The concept of equitable renting was being cleaned up from decades-old cobwebs, but it would still be possible to go to the Rent Regulation Board, which was being given new powers and new resources to make long-running cases a thing of the past.

The Bill included provisions that the minister could make regulations about non-political clubs, but they would continue to be protected for the next two years under the outgoing law. Dr Borg said he himself believed that such protection should last as long as the time it would take to formulate the new regulations. It was a fact that not all such clubs needed the same level of protection.

He expressed the hope that the government would receive the amendments proposed by the opposition as soon as possible. After all, the government side would not have the luxury of six months to ponder the proposed amendments, as the opposition had been able to do with the White Paper.

The opposition should remember that it could not please everyone, not even from the opposition benches.

Other speakers will be reported tomorrow.

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Comments

dusty william (on 16/1/09)
At least the PL try to please all during the whole 5 year period. Unlike the PN who only manage to please 'some' just before the election.
C Attard (on 15/1/09)
@ m farrugia

When criticising politicians and their behaviour one must not let his heart feelings carry him away! You just missed an interesting point in rushing to the same conclusions about George Abela; have it reached your mind that Gonzi is behaving like this not to break his party into more disappointed small groups. Gonzi's leadership is heading the wrong way, opposite to what his party members and admirers wished him to be when they supported and voted him.

In the other hand the PM got another string, that with which he's trying to manipulate the media and the general public. Tonio Borg is his helper and couldn't do better than this.

They just moan and grunt while wishing that no Opposition exists.
P.Schembri (on 15/1/09)
@all pn bloggers. Take off your blinkers and try to criticise constructively. All you have done is criticise the speaker not the message. State your reasons where the Leader of the Opposition is wrong. I know it takes courage. So stop acting like parrots.
m. farrugia (on 15/1/09)
Having settled the EU, euro issues, the PM seems determined to tackle much needed reforms in this legislature. Joseph is mistaken if he thinks that by trying to please everybody he will impress. Everyone knows that it is very difficult and almost impossible in the world to please everyone.

He will surely lose his credibility and PM will gain points for doing what it is in the best interest of the country, as he has already done in the case of the President, even if probably some PN MPs would have preferred a member from their own side. The PM did not try to please his colleagues only, but gave priority to the interest of the country as a whole.

The PM has already gained a lot of respect following this decision, whilst the PL probably lost one of its greatest chances of being elected in govt. in 4 yrs time by not choosing Abela as their leader.
m. farrugia (on 15/1/09)
Exactly. Yesterday Dr Michael Farruga on TX programme on Super One, repeatedly declared that owners of property were suffering an injustice, but to solve this injustice, it was unfair to hit tenants badly, so the govt (i.e. the taxpayers) should help these families to pay their Euro 185 yearly bill.

Tajba, mela to please everyone, the taxpayer is asked to fork out money. Can't the PL realise that subsidies from taxpayer's money are a thing of the past now? Is it not enough that taxpayers are forced to pay millions of money to single mothers who fail to declare the name of the baby's father but are often than not living with their partner in a govt provided housing, to bus drivers, when a good number of us have not used a bus for years?

With such an active govt who is eager to tackle a number of issues which have proved difficult to tackle in the past due to similar attitudes from the PL and unions , at the end the PL stands to lose if instead of giving concrete proposals it tries to please everyone. If anything, the PM is surely not on honeymoon.
S Cassar (on 15/1/09)
XEJN GDID!

THAT'S JOSEPH'S STYLE IMMA ISSA KULHADD QED JINDUNA KIF JAHDEM JOSEPH
EDWIN DE MARCO (on 15/1/09)
Tonio Borg states that 'the opposition is trying to please everyone'. Much better than displeasing everybody around,(including Nationalists too),which is what he (Tonio Borg) & his cronies have been doing since March 2008.
Joe Cordina (on 15/1/09)
Isn't pleasing everyone something that sould be done and acted on by the governement??
lgalea (on 15/1/09)
Look who's talking!
P.Schembri (on 15/1/09)
@Joseph Agius. Excuse me, are you so blinkered that you can't read. Nowhere did Joseph Muscat defend the clubs. He proposed that all political clubs be treated as other clubs. Nowhere did he say that clubs shouldn't pay rent or whatsoever. Read the articles dedicated to the rent law then criticise, if you know how to, that is.
joseph Agius (on 15/1/09)
Actually Joseph is trying to please his people- defending the clubs PL stole from the people!
V Fenech (on 15/1/09)
As I always say...same old Tonio!

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