More than unusual tension
Now that John Dalli has been successfully promoted up and out of the way in Brussels, you'd imagine that Lawrence Gonzi can finally sit back, relax and heave a sigh of relief. What about the disgruntled backbenchers who regarded Mr Dalli as their sympathetic father-confessor? Well, you'd imagine that after Dr and Mrs Gonzi's fatherly and motherly home visit to Franco Debono - no doubt, an innocent family reunion held in the glowing spirit of Christmas against the ideal crib-like background of rustic Għaxaq - the PN leader can at long last say: All is well on the backbenchers' front too.
I disagree with Maltastar.com's suggestion that the Prime Minister's visit to Dr Debono was really a "secret meeting". I rather agree with Mark-Anthony Falzon's view that it was a cleverly stage-managed attempt to reassure the Nationalist rank-and-file that all was OK. That it was nothing but the ordinary sort of family misunderstanding that all families go through. "The intended message was clear: Dr Debono was more misbehaving child than political dissenter and all he needed was a spot of gentle but firm counsel by his parents" (The Sunday Times, January 3).
But is everything OK? As Lino Spiteri, whose "old political nose" is not - contrary to his tongue-in-cheek assertion - "getting a bit blocked", has suggested in this newspaper that "there seems to have been a clear objective in Dr Debono's self-exclusion from the votes, which went beyond an inadvertent incident". In the same piece (Talking Point, December 21, 2009), Mr Spiteri drew readers' attention to this newspaper's report of December 19, which said that when "asked why he was absent at the moment (of the House votes), Dr Debono answered cryptically that he could have taken the action 'on a point of principle' but he did not elaborate".
Hmmm. Let's replay Mr Spiteri's comment: "Principle is no ordinary word. It is a heavy term. When one does something as a matter of principle, one would have thought it over carefully. The action is deliberate. Which means that Dr Debono embarrassed his side - the government - with unambiguous intent."
Regarding Dr Debono's later explanation that it was all about dignity, about not wanting to be a voice in the wilderness, Mr Spiteri is - correctly - dismissive: "the principle which made Dr Debono deliberately abstain is a stronger force that could go beyond the dignity excuse". He is equally dismissive of the scenario that sees Dr Debono reacting to the possibility of Louis Galea successfully contesting the by-election resulting from Mr Dalli's departure and returning to Cabinet, thus blocking Dr Debono's own hypothetical promotion.
One may have reserves regarding Mr Spiteri's categorical exclusion of the career opportunity motive in Dr Debono's pre-Christmas hide-and-seek ballet. Long-term planning (as opposed to leaping through immediate-term and dangerously narrow windows of opportunity) is not everybody's strength. Rationality is not inevitable, even in politics. My own view is that there was probably a mix of principles, motives, pressures and frustrations. On the other hand, nobody in his right senses - least of all the Prime Minister - can disagree with Mr Spiteri's conclusion that there is an "unusual tension in the Nationalist parliamentary group which, unlike Labour, is not used to clothes being washed in public".
In this column, I have on several occasions (and as of day one) argued that the "unusual tension" goes far beyond the House of Representatives (although it does not, evidently, spare it) and cannot be measured in terms of parliamentary arithmetic alone. That's why I spoke, and still do, of "severe turbulence" rather than "unusual tension". On January 19, 2009, a year ago almost to the day, I pointed out that: "governments are made possible by alliances: social and political alliances, by alliances of convenience and, sometimes, of conviction, by strategic and tactical alliances, by long-term and short-term alliances. Many of the alliances that this government is built on are beginning to come apart."
Dr Gonzi is not only the Prime Minister but he is also the one that sits centre stage on the government's side of Parliament. He is, therefore, not only aware of the moods of the members of his Cabinet - of those that sit on both his sides on the front bench - but also of those who sit behind him in the backbenches. They may be less visible to him because of their lesser role but, surely, their frustrated mutterings reach his ears. He knows, therefore, that there's more to his backbench's discontent than one MP's frustrations.
He knows there is more to it than the sum of the frustrations of all possibly frustrated MPs. He knows because he is not only the Prime Minister and the principal actor on the government side of Parliament but also the PN's kap (head). In his latter position, he is bound to sense the seismic rumblings that signal the coming apart of many of the alliances on which his government is built. He knows that "unusual tension" in his parliamentary group is an effect - not a cause - of these konsenturi (cracks) in the social foundations of his government. Not only has Mr Dalli's departure not solved any of his problems but has actually crippled his government further. I was never his fan, but Mr Dalli was the only one in Dr Gonzi's team capable of understanding the structural problems of our economy and, possibly, doing something about them. Economic problems will deepen the cracks.
Dr Vella blogs at watersbroken.wordpress.com.
5 Comments
Post comment
Please sign in or create your Account to post comments.
N.Calleja
Jan 18th 2010, 16:46
I have always learnt that people in glass houses must not throw stones, Mario Vella. Why don't you have a look at your own backyard. It is full of skeletons!
D Ellul
Jan 18th 2010, 15:05
@s fenech The cracks in the PN are so evident. If you keep denying them, the greater the Labour victory in 2013 will be.
P. Schembri
Jan 18th 2010, 14:10
Tension is on your party's doorstep. It's already twice that the PM had to step down from decisions fearing his backbenchers. Where is the tension on the PL's side? Because it decided to abolish the post of General Secretary? That's a triviality when compared to the state your party and government is in!
MSciberras
Jan 18th 2010, 13:54
In Malta people are in the dark as to how government actually works, for example the operational relationship between PM, cabinet, ministries, the govt agencies and parastatal companies. This is not the result of censorship. Apparently Maltese journalists do not find this of news value or assume that it is common knowledge. As someone who has had some direct experience of how these relationships work, together with thousands of other Maltese (and have walked away from the experience both admiring the perseverance and dedication of many poorly paid individuals and horrified at the disfunctional mechanisms and absence of direct ownership and responsibilities over tasks and objectives on the part of many) I strongly believe that a greater public awarenes of how govt at all levels in Malta actually works is in fact essential in a democracy if ordinary citizens and opinion makers are to understand and gauge the effectiveness or otherwise of our politicians. It is a test that I believe our PM has failed. Ironically at the same time, this lack of knowledge means that the true value of certain successes is not appreciated by the general public.
s. fenech
Jan 18th 2010, 12:44
perhaps mario vella should concentrate closer to home, and analyse the tension in the labour party. plenty there for him to keep occupied... for example the succession or better the non succession of of the booted upstairs party general secretay.