Editorial
So Parliament may earn people's respect
So soon after passing through his baptism of fire in his post as Speaker of the House of Representatives, when uproars in Parliament sparked a strong national feeling of disapproval at the behaviour of some parliamentarians, Michael Frendo touched a raw nerve when he spoke, at the Sette Giugno commemoration in Valletta, of the need for greater respect for, and appreciation of, Parliament's work. For, painful as it may well be to members of Parliament who regard their calling to politics as a vocation, many no longer hold the institution in very high esteem.
People generally are growing increasingly weary of some of the politicians' antics and feel that, even though uproars and time-wasting positions in Parliament are, thankfully, not the order of the day, MPs should give a better account of themselves in the House all the time. So, in the light of this general feeling, the Speaker's call jarred a bit. The institution's members have to earn the people's respect through their work and behaviour, the quality of their contribution and the sincerity and vocational spirit in which they carry out their duty on behalf of those who elected them.
When a huge expenses scandal rocked the mother of parliaments, the House of Commons, The Daily Telegraph made a most telling editorial statement: "Politicians are not doing us an honour by sitting on the green benches; we are doing them an honour by investing in them the power to make decisions about our daily lives as our elected representatives. Too few appear to grasp this point." Very true, not just in Britain, but elsewhere too, including, of course, in Malta.
The trouble is that, once elected, far too many MPs act as if they are a privileged class, a trait that goes directly against the spirit that shaped the political career of quite a number of exemplary politicians, such as, for example, former President and Prime Minister, Eddie Fenech Adami. A true sense of vocation thrives and grows in lively parliamentary debates but not in positions, or behaviour, that may well erode respect for Parliament. The country has had far too many examples of this in the past but the growing legion of uncommitted voters would not, today, tolerate the same kind of behaviour. The new Speaker of the House should realise that the people do appreciate Parliament's work. What they are against are the causes that lead to disenchantment.
This is why people today have more faith in the European Parliament than in their own House of Representatives. Very ironically, the Speaker's words came only a day after the publication of a newspaper report about a new survey showing that Maltese businessmen are more trusted than politicians. This is quite a disquieting finding. According to the survey, done by a Maltese firm for the European Commission, politicians have the worst reputation among various categories and professions, including entrepreneurs, civil servants, lawyers, architects and managers. In fact, nearly a third of Maltese respondents, 32 per cent, see politicians in a negative light.
Unsurprisingly, none of the parliamentarians dared respond to the call for an apology made by this newspaper following the recent events in the House, when, at one time, it took seven hours to approve the minutes. More than a new Parliament building, the institution and its component members would need to see how it can operate more efficiently all the time in order to regain the people's respect.
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Godfrey Camilleri
Jun 15th 2010, 18:29
What was laughable about the Hon Frendo's appeal was that this respect justified the new parliament building at the entrance of Valletta. As was pointed out by Ms Astrid Vella there enough aubergies that would have been imposing enough to accommodate parliament and the voted money would have been available to rebuild the opera house as the majority of the Maltese wish it to be. When parliament respects the wish of the majority will the majority respect parliament.
l fenech
Jun 15th 2010, 17:31
Out of curiosity I looked up the word "respect" in the dictionary to see if the meaning coinsides with that of Michael Frendo. It did not.
Antonio Anastasi
Jun 15th 2010, 15:58
Well said!
"Politicians are not doing us an honour by sitting on the green benches; we are doing them an honour by investing in them the power to make decisions about our daily lives as our elected representatives. Too few appear to grasp this point." Very true, not just in Britain, but elsewhere too, including, of course, in Malta.
Maybe your paper should hold them more to task and not, what I often feel, is simply reporting the news.
Thank you for the editorial and expressing what I think most of the people I know feel.
Pat Hobson
Jun 15th 2010, 12:42
Mr. Editor. The minutes took that long to pass because of the Government's obstinacy to acknowledge the opposition's proposals! But you're quite right about an apology. The Government should apologise to us Joe Public for turning Parliament into an ongoing farce. Have it crossed your mind that if the minutes were passed without any opposition, it would nullify all that happened on Thursday night? Do you know that if the minutes were passed without the changes the opposition wanted, it would have appeared that the Government was right all along, which we know it isn't?
Yes, you're quite right. An apology is being demanded by Joe Public. One for turning our Parliament into a comedy of errors and secondly because the Government is trying to stultify the Opposition, which after represents half of the Maltese nation.
N.Lawrence
Jun 15th 2010, 11:52
In a nutshell, bull'seye!