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Labour Party (Malta)

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Labour Party
Partit Laburista
AbbreviationPL
LeaderRobert Abela
PresidentAlex Sciberras
Governing bodyNational Executive
Deputy leader for parliamentary affairsIan Borg
Deputy leader for party affairsAlex Agius Saliba
FounderWilliam Savona
Founded15 March 1921; 103 years ago (15 March 1921)
Headquarters77 Triq Mile End, Hamrun
NewspaperKullħadd
Think tankFondazzjoni IDEAT
Youth wingLabour Youths
Women's wingLabour Women
Membership17,500 (2020)[1]
Ideology
Political positionCentre to centre-left
Historical:
Left-wing
National affiliationMalta Labour Movement (1978–1992)[3]
European affiliationParty of European Socialists
European Parliament groupProgressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats
International affiliationSocialist International (1949–2014)
Colours  Red
SloganLabor Omnia Vincit
Anthem"L-Innu tal-Partit Laburista"
("Anthem of the Labour Party")
Parliament of Malta
43 / 79
European Parliament
3 / 6
Mayors of localities
39 / 68
Local council seats
252 / 462
Election symbol
Torch
Party flag
Flag of the Labour Party
Website
partitlaburista.org

The Labour Party (Maltese: Partit Laburista, PL), formerly known as the Malta Labour Party (Maltese: Partit tal-Ħaddiema, MLP), is one of the two major political parties in Malta, along with the Nationalist Party.[4][5] It sits on the centre-left of the political spectrum.[6]

The party was founded in 1921 as the Chamber of Labour by a small group of trade unionists. Ideologically, the party was orientated towards democratic socialism and other left-wing stances until the early 1990s, when it followed the lead of like-minded Western social-democratic parties like Britain's New Labour.[7][8] The party still claims to be democratic-socialist in their party programme.[9][10][11] Under the rule of Joseph Muscat, the party shifted to a more centrist position,[12][13] adopting Third Way policies.[14][15][16] A formerly Eurosceptic party,[17] it claims to hold pro-European stances and is a member of the Party of European Socialists,[18][19] and was previously a member of the Socialist International until 2014.[20]

Party structure

[edit]

The party structures are the General Conference, the National Executive, the Leader, and the Deputy Leaders, the Party Congress, the Party Administration, the Parliamentary Group, the Councillors' Section, the District and the Regional Administrations, the Local Committees, and the Branches.[21]

The General Conference is largely made up of delegates from the Party's other constituent structures and is the Party's highest organ. The National Executive brings together the Party Administration as well as elected representatives of other constituent structures and co-ordinators. The Party Congress is made up of all members of the Party and elects the Leader and the two Deputy Leaders (one for Party, the other for Parliamentary affairs) and determines the Party's broad policy outlines. The Party Administration is made of the Party Leader, Deputy Leaders, and Party officials. The Parliamentary Group and the Councillors' Section bring together the Party's elected representatives in parliament and local councils. The Party is organised geographically in the local committees (smallest) and district and regional (largest) administrations. Finally, the branches of the party include the women's, youth, senior, and candidates' sections.

Media holdings

[edit]

Although not formally part of the party's structures, the party owns a number of media and communication outlets, the largest being the television station ONE and radio service ONE Radio through its holding company ONE Productions.[22] The party also owns the publishing house SKS (Sensiela Kotba Soċjalisti) and produces the weekly Sunday newspaper Kullħadd. The party formerly ran the travel agency Sunrise Travel and the MVNO RedTouch Fone.[23][24]

History

[edit]

Foundation, first years, and first government (1921–1949)

[edit]

The Labour Party was founded as the Chamber of Labour (Italian: Camera del Lavoro) in 1921 by one of the union branches affiliated with the Imperial Government Workers Union. Band clubs and other organisations were invited to send delegates to the Party's founding meeting on 15 March 1921, significantly, the 30th anniversary of Pope Leo XIII's Rerum novarum.[25]

The original Labour emblem in use until 1933[citation needed]

Led by Colonel William Savona, the Party contested the general elections held in 1921 and 1924 under the new Constitution that gave the country a measure of self-government. The Labour-Constitutional alliance won the 1927 general elections, but Labour lost ground, gaining 13.9% of votes, three seats in the Legislative Assembly and no representation in the Senate. Strickland became prime minister. Labour leader Savona was not elected, and the leadership of the Labour parliamentary group was temporarily entrusted to Colonel Michael Dundon. The Presidency of the Party and leadership of the parliamentary group was taken up by Paul Boffa later that year.[citation needed] In 1930, it adopted a party anthem.[26][27]

Labour gained nine seats out of ten in the elections held during November 1945, in which, contrarily to previous elections, all men over twenty-one years of age were entitled to vote. The Party's electoral programme, for the first time in Labour's history, did not make any reference to religion. Boffa's Government was supported by the General Workers' Union, and it carried out a number of reforms, such as the abolition of the Senate, the abolition of plural votes, as well as the introduction of women's right to vote. However, Labour deputies resigned from their posts in July 1946 due to mass redundancies at the Dockyards. In the meantime, the 'MacMichael Constitution' had been introduced, granting self-government to the Maltese. Labour's participation in the subsequent October 1947 elections was once again supported by the General Workers' Union. The Party won 59.9% of the vote and twenty-four seats out of the possible forty within the Legislative Assembly. Paul Boffa became prime minister whilst Dom Mintoff became Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Reconstruction. The Labour Government introduced Income Tax and Social Services for the first time in Malta.[citation needed]

Re-founding and return to government (1949–1958)

[edit]
Emblem of the MLP adopted in 1949 on a flag. The emblem was changed in 2008 but it is still commonly seen at Labour meetings and events.[citation needed]

The Labour Party was re-founded in 1949 as a successor to the Labour Party founded in 1921. Paul Boffa, Leader of the Labour Party and prime minister since 1947, resigned and left the party because of serious disagreements with his Deputy Dom Mintoff which had led to a series of cabinet crises. Boffa formed the Malta Workers Party (MWP) while Mintoff re-organized the Labour Party as the Malta Labour Party.[citation needed] It has also adopted The Internationale as one of its anthems.[28][29]

The Malta Labour Party contested its first elections for the Malta Legislative Assembly the following year. The old Labour vote was split equally between the MLP and the MWP, giving them eleven members each. This allowed the Nationalist Party (PN) to have a slight edge in the formation of a government, which it did in coalition with the MWP. The government did not last long. Two other elections were held in 1951 and 1953 (the last time a coalition governed in Malta) which both saw short-lived PN-MWP coalitions and the decline in the share of votes to the MWP with increasing support for the Labour Party.[citation needed]

The MWP eventually disintegrated and the MLP formed a government for the first time in 1955. This legislature was dominated by the issue of integration with the United Kingdom. The party, which started its life as an anti-colonial party with the slogan "Integration or self-determination" was now inclined towards the first part of the formula.[30] A referendum was held in 1956 but given the number of abstentions and massive opposition by the Nationalist Party and the Catholic Church, the result was inconclusive. This, together with a number of dismissals at the naval dockyard led to Mintoff's resignation and his call for massive protests in April 1958.[citation needed]

Opposition (1958–1971)

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The Governor re-established direct colonial government which lasted until 1962. In the meantime, the Malta Labour Party's connections with Third World Independentist and Socialist movements set it on a collision course with the Maltese Catholic Church, which the Party perceived as being pro-British and the cause of the failure of the Integration project. This led to the party leadership being interdicted from 1961 to 1964, when reading, advertising and distributing Party newspapers was deemed a mortal sin. In the 1962 elections, this led to the defeat of the Party at the polls as well as a split with the creation of the Christian Workers' Party. Peace with the Church would not be made until 1969 by which time the Christian Workers' Party had disintegrated.[citation needed]

The MLP participated in independence talks but disagreed with what was offered, causing them to not participate in the Independence celebrations when independence was actually achieved in 1964. The party made strong gains in the 1966 elections which, however, were not enough to see it in office.[citation needed]

An unimportant split occurred in 1969 when the Communist Party of Malta was founded. This split happened as a result of the truce between the Malta Labour Party and local Catholic authorities. The Communist Party has since only contested the 1987 elections.[citation needed]

Post-independence Mintoff governments (1971–1984)

[edit]

Labour won the 1971 general election and immediately set out to re-negotiate the post-Independence military and financial agreements with the United Kingdom. The government also undertook socialist-style nationalization programmes, import substitution schemes, and the expansion of the public sector and the welfare state. Employment laws were revised with gender equality being introduced in salary pay. In the case of civil law, civil (non-religious) marriage was introduced and homosexuality and adultery were decriminalised. Through a package of constitutional reforms agreed to with the opposition party, Malta became a republic in 1974.[citation needed]

The Labour Party was confirmed in office in the 1976 elections. In 1981 the Party managed to hold on to a parliamentary majority, even though the opposition Nationalist Party managed an absolute majority of more than 4000 votes. A serious political crisis ensued when Nationalist MPs refused to accept the electoral result and also refused to take their seats in parliament for the first years of the legislature. Premier Dom Mintoff called this action "perverse" but it was not an uncommon one in any parliamentary democracy with disputed election results. He proposed to his parliamentary group that fresh elections be held, [citation needed] but most members of his Parliamentary group rejected his proposal.[citation needed] Mintoff, who had been considering vacating the party leadership position even before the elections,[citation needed] voluntarily resigned as prime minister and Party leader in 1984 (although he retained his parliamentary seat). A Party General Conference in that same year appointed Karmenu Mifsud Bonnici who acted uncontested as party leader.[citation needed]

Post-Mintoff era (1984–1992)

[edit]
The club of the Malta Labour Party in Republic Street, Valletta in 1985.

The Mifsud Bonnici years were characterised by political tensions and violence. The deadlock was broken when constitutional amendments were made voted and made effective in January 1987 which guaranteed that the party with an absolute majority of votes would be given a majority of parliamentary seats in order to govern. This paved the way for the return of the Nationalist Party to government later that year.[citation needed]

The Labour Party performed very badly in the following election in 1992, losing by nearly 13,000 votes. Mifsud Bonnici resigned due to deteriorating health and on 26 March, Labour elected Alfred Sant as the new leader.[citation needed]

Sant leadership, modernisation, and challenges (1992–2008)

[edit]

Sant who won the election for party leader, and then modernized the party, secured a victory at the polls in 1996. Under Sant's leadership the party made several changes. The party opened the new Labour Party Headquarters in Hamrun instead of the old Macina in Cottonera. The party also made giant steps in the media by being the first Maltese political party to own its radio and television stations.[citation needed]

Sant managed to win comfortably the 1996 elections held on 26 October by over 8,000 votes on the Nationalist Party. The 1987 constitutional amendments, which secured the necessary additional seats, had to be used for the second time, having been used for the same time in 1987. This same amendment had to be used a third time in 2008.[citation needed]

However, trouble was brewing. Mintoff, for reasons known to him alone (within the MLP), started creating problems in Parliament for the one-seat Labour parliamentary majority. In the summer of 1998, Labour lost a division vote on the proposed Cottonera waterfront project because of Mintoff's renegation on his parliamentary group. This was considered by Prime Minister Sant as a vote of no confidence in his government and informed the then-President of the Republic that he no longer held a parliamentary majority as a result. The President had on various occasions asked Prime Minister Alfred Sant to try to find a solution for the political crisis created, but when all attempts proved futile, he had no other option but to accept Sant and his government's resignation and a call for early elections, which were held on 5 September 1998. The Labour Party was defeated with a wide 13,000 vote margin.[citation needed]

Back in opposition, the party campaigned unsuccessfully against EU membership, and the 'NO' camp lost the referendum for the ascension of Malta in the European Union on 8 March (although Sant claimed victory) and was again defeated in the general election a month later on 14 April 2003, once more with a 12,000 vote margin. Sant resigned but stood again for party leader, where he was re-elected with more than 65% of the votes.[citation needed]

In June 2004 the party succeeded in obtaining a relative majority of votes in the elections held to elect the first five Maltese MEPs for the European Parliament.[31] The party elected three of his candidates: Joseph Muscat (later replaced by Glenn Bedingfield), John Attard Montalto and Louis Grech.[citation needed]

In 2008 the Labour Party lost for the third consecutive time in the 2008 general elections, obtaining 48.79% share of the vote[32] and losing the election to the Nationalist Party by just 1,580 votes or 0.5%. Following the loss of the election, Sant resigned as Labour Party leader on 10 March 2008.[citation needed]

Muscat leadership (2008–2020)

[edit]
The new flag of the Labour Party.
Labourites celebrate after the 2013 election.

The first round of the election of the new leader were held on 5 June 2008. Five members contested this election as candidates: George Abela (a former Deputy Leader), Evarist Bartolo (a frontbench MP and ex-Minister), Marie Louise Coleiro Preca (a frontbench MP and former Secretary-General of the Party), Michael Falzon (an MP and Deputy Leader of the Party) and Joseph Muscat (an MEP). In the first round neither candidate obtained 50%+1 the majority of the votes. So a run up election had to be held on 6 June between the top two candidates who obtained the most votes, George Abela and Joseph Muscat. Muscat was elected Labour Party leader, gathering 66.36% of the total votes. He was co-opted in Parliament and appointed Leader of the Opposition on 1 October.[citation needed]

During an Extraordinary General Conference, held in November 2008, it was decided that the party's official name would be Partit Laburista instead of its former English name, the Malta Labour Party. The previous emblem was changed, although the symbol of the torch was retained.[citation needed]

In June 2009, the party garnered 55 percent of the first preference votes in the election for the European Parliament, electing three MEPs who sit with the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats. This result led to Labour a fourth MEP when the Treaty of Lisbon came into effect and the number of seats allocated to Malta increased from five to six.[citation needed]

Muscat managed to win comfortably the 2013 elections held on 9 March by over 35,000 votes on the Nationalist Party. The Labour Party won a massive 55% of the votes.[citation needed]

In the 2014 MEP elections, the Labour Party retained a majority of 34,000 votes (53%), but lost its fourth seat to the Nationalist Party candidate Therese Comodini Cachia.[citation needed]

In 2015, the party was delisted from the Socialist International for not paying membership fees.[33]

In 2017, Joseph Muscat was re-elected during the general election, with Labour appearing to win with a clear landslide victory for the second consecutive time, merely an hour after the vote counting commenced.

Under Muscat's leadership Malta's national deficit was eliminated,[34] unemployment decreased to historic lows,[35] and an unprecedented period of economic growth occurred.[36] However, he was criticised by figures on both sides of the political spectrum, accused of political opportunism,[37] broken promises on meritocracy[38] and the environment,[39] as well as corruption allegations.[40] On 1 December 2019, Muscat announced his resignation, to take effect after 12 January 2020,[41] due to the 2019 Maltese protests caused by the murder of anti-corruption journalist and government critic Daphne Caruana Galizia. Muscat was accused of impeding the investigation. Robert Abela was elected to replace him, promising continuity with previous policies pursued by the party.

Abela leadership (2020–present)

[edit]

As the party held a parliamentary majority at the time of Muscat's resignation, Robert Abela would become prime minister immediately after, on 13 January 2020.[42] He was recognized as the "continuity" candidate instead of Chris Fearne, emphasizing stability, unity and normality, as opposed to the bolder changes advocated by Fearne.[43]

Abela is considered to be aligned to traditional Labour's values, such as social housing and free medicine for the elderly.[44]

In March 2020, Malta registered its first COVID-19 case. Abela was at first reluctant to close the Malta International Airport, retail outlets and the schools, but felt compelled to do so a few days later as public pressure mounted.[45]

In April 2020, Prime Minister Abela called for 'national unity' on Television Malta, the country's national broadcasting television. This has been criticized for being partisan.[46]

In November 2020, Abela stated "that the party will continue to reinvent itself with the introduction of more young people and women at the centre of its decision-making process."[47]

On 18 February 2021, Abela announced plans to introduce a law that would end police arrests for those possessing a small amount of cannabis and plants for personal use.[48] This bill was passed in December 2021, and Malta became the first country in the European Union to legalise cannabis.[49]

Abela's leadership was criticised with the number of co-options that had taken place, being deemed as undemocratic.[50]

in the 2022 general election, the Labour Party retained its majority in parliament, winning a third consecutive election for the first time since 1981 with 55.11% of the popular vote, the largest share since 1955, marginally surpassing the 55.04% it scored in 2017. Voter turnout was 86%. this was mainly because of various reasons including how Labour dealt with the COVID-19 pandemic, the fact that the economy was still booming, and unemployment kept at a minimum low despite the pandemic and the way that Labour reinvented itself by tackling corruption and money laundering by ushered in a raft of rule-of-law reforms to counter claims of government corruption and grey listing of Malta by the FATF.[51]

Election results

[edit]

House of Representatives

[edit]
Election Leader Votes % Seats +/– Rank Status
1921 William Savona 4,742 23.2
7 / 32
Increase 7 Increase 3rd Opposition
1924 4,632 19.2
7 / 32
Steady Steady 3rd Opposition
1927 5,011 14.5
3 / 32
Decrease 4 Steady 3rd Coalition
1932 Paul Boffa 4,138 8.6
1 / 32
Decrease 2 Steady 3rd Opposition
1939 3,100 8.8
1 / 10
Steady Steady 3rd Opposition
1945 19,071 76.2
9 / 10
Increase 8 Increase 1st Majority
1947 63,145 59.9
24 / 40
Increase 15 Steady 1st Majority
1950 Dom Mintoff 30,332 28.6
11 / 40
Decrease 13 Decrease 2nd Opposition
1951 40,208 35.7
14 / 40
Increase 3 Steady 2nd Opposition
1953 52,771 44.6
19 / 40
Increase 5 Increase 1st Opposition
1955 68,447 56.7
23 / 40
Increase 4 Steady 1st Majority
1962 50,974 33.8
16 / 50
Decrease 7 Decrease 2nd Opposition
1966 61,774 43.1
22 / 50
Increase 6 Steady 2nd Opposition
1971 85,448 50.8
28 / 55
Increase 6 Increase 1st Majority
1976 105,854 51.5
34 / 65
Increase 6 Steady 1st Majority
1981 109,990 49.1
34 / 65
Steady Steady 1st Majority
1987 Karmenu Mifsud Bonnici 114,936 48.9
34 / 69
Steady Decrease 2nd Opposition
1992 114,911 46.5
31 / 65
Decrease 3 Steady 2nd Opposition
1996 Alfred Sant 132,497 50.7
35 / 69
Increase 4 Increase 1st Majority
1998 124,220 47.0
30 / 65
Decrease 5 Decrease 2nd Opposition
2003 134,092 47.5
30 / 65
Steady Steady 2nd Opposition
2008 141,888 48.8
34 / 69
Increase 4 Steady 2nd Opposition
2013 Joseph Muscat 167,533 54.8
39 / 69
Increase 5 Increase 1st Majority
2017 170,976 55.0
37 / 67
Decrease 2 Steady 1st Majority
2022 Robert Abela 162,707 55.11
44 / 79
Increase 7 Steady 1st Majority

European Parliament

[edit]
Election Leader Votes % Seats +/– Rank EP Group
2004 Alfred Sant 118,983 48.4
3 / 5
New Increase 1st PES
2009 Joseph Muscat 135,917 54.8
4 / 6
Increase 1 Steady 1st S&D
2014 134,462 53.3
3 / 6
Decrease 1 Steady 1st
2019 141,267 54.3
4 / 6
Increase 1 Steady 1st
2024 Robert Abela 117,805 45.3
3 / 6
Decrease 1 Steady 1st

Party leadership

[edit]

Leaders of the Labour Party

[edit]

The post of Leader of the Labour Party was created in 1928. Before this (1921–28) the post was known as President of the Camera del Lavoro (Labour Party).

Name Entered office Left office Length of Leadership Date of Birth and Death
1 William Savona 30 August 1925 16 August 1927 1 year, 11 months, 17 days 7 January 1865 – 18 January 1937
2 Michael Dundon 16 August 1927 29 November 1928 1 year, 3 months, 13 days 10 November 1854 – 5 April 1936
3 Paul Boffa 29 November 1928 12 October 1949 20 years, 10 months, 13 days 30 June 1890 – 6 July 1962
4 Dom Mintoff 16 October 1949 22 December 1984 35 years, 2 months, 6 days 6 August 1916 – 20 August 2012
5 Karmenu Mifsud Bonnici 22 December 1984 26 March 1992 7 years, 3 months, 4 days 17 July 1933 – 5 November 2022
6 Alfred Sant 26 March 1992 10 March 2008 15 years, 11 months, 15 days 28 February 1948 – present
7 Charles Mangion 10 March 2008 6 June 2008 2 months, 27 days 14 November 1952 – present
8 Joseph Muscat 6 June 2008 12 January 2020 11 years, 7 months and 6 days 22 January 1974 – present
9 Robert Abela 12 January 2020 Present 4 years, 11 months and 15 days 7 December 1977 – present

Although technically leader of the Labour Party, they only assumed this role because of the resignation of the incumbent leader and were not elected to the post.

Deputy leaders of the Labour Party in the Maltese House of Representatives since 1920

[edit]

Deputy leaders of the Labour Party Affairs since 1976

[edit]

See also

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References

[edit]
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  2. ^ "Red Clyde: Labour should not be ashamed of calling itself socialist". MaltaToday. 30 October 2022.
  3. ^ Zammit, Edward L. (1989). A colonial inheritance: Maltese perceptions of work, power and class structure with reference to the labour movement. Malta: Malta University Press.
  4. ^ INDEPENDENT online Archived 2 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram (2017). "Malta". Parties and Elections in Europe. Archived from the original on 20 January 2013. Retrieved 7 June 2018.
  6. ^ Dallison, Paul (13 April 2014). "Centre-left on course for victory in Maltese election". Politico. Archived from the original on 28 November 2019. Retrieved 28 November 2019.
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  16. ^ Rix, Juliet (2010). Malta. Chalfont St. Peter: Bradt Travel Guides. ISBN 978-1-84162-312-2. OCLC 501398370.
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  25. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 February 2012. Retrieved 25 August 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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