top of page

albertbuttigieg.com

English

Malti

© 2025 Albert Buttigieg. All rights reserved.

Partit Nazzjonalista

Partit Nazzjonalista

@buttigiegalbert

@buttigiegalbert

@ButtigiegAlbert

@ButtigiegAlbert

Recent Articles
Are we now a neurotic nation?

Are we now a neurotic nation?

While the Labour government frequently highlights our resilient economy, many people are left wondering: at what cost? People are constantly on edge and ready to flare up. Credit: Shutterstock.com Although Malta is thriving economically, a closer look reveals growing signs of social strain, signs that are not only becoming increasingly visible but are also leaving lasting marks on the daily lives of many. It seems that more people are constantly on edge, irritable and ready to flare up at the...

16/12/25

It-tfal kollha kollha tagħna!

It-tfal kollha kollha tagħna!

Il-kelma ‘inklużjoni’ tikxef mentalità fejn KULĦADD huwa ugwali. Din l-ugwaljanza ġejja mill-prinċipju fundamentali li lkoll kemm għandna l-istess dinjità umana. Issa, din id-dinjità ma tiddependix mill-abilitajiet differenti li wieħed jista’ jkollu. Credit: Rawpixel / envato.com Id-dinjità umana hija l-essenza ta’ dak li jagħmilna bnedmin. Dan huwa valur intrinsiku. Jista’ ma jkollix idejn, ma nismax, ma narax IMMA xorta jiena persuna umana daqs ħaddiehor li għandu idejn, jisma’ u jara....

06/12/25

Il-fond ta’ investiment għat-tfal: Proposta għaqlija

Il-fond ta’ investiment għat-tfal: Proposta għaqlija

Dan l-aħħar il-Partit Nazzjonalista nieda proposta li jkun hemm fond għal kull wild ġdid li jitwieled. B’hekk kull wild, irripettivament mill-familja tiegħu. Jibda’ l-ħajja bl-istess opportunità.

25/11/25

BLOG
Albert Buttigieg in St Julian's

Yes, prime minister, we are different

  • manuelschembri
  • May 1, 2023
  • 3 min read

Updated: May 12, 2023

The Nationalist Party has a history to be proud of… The term ‘conservative’ is not a dirty word, neither does it refer to someone trapped in a time warp.



A healthy democracy can mature only if it embraces different political schools of thought. Western democracies are robust due to their determination to advocate diversity of thought. Only autocrats feel threatened when challenged with different political outlooks.


Hence, I was baffled when, recently, Prime Minister Robert Abela declared that “they (the Nationalist Party) are conservative”, as though to say “what a dishonour”. However, the term ‘conservative’ is not a dirty word, neither does it refer to someone trapped in a time warp.


Conservatism is a political school of thought that has been present since the dawn of democracy.


As the term itself implies, it safeguards and promotes a number of core values, which are cherished as the cornerstone of civilisation.


Mainly, these are: the value of human dignity without any distinction; the value of life from conception; the advocacy for social justice and solidarity; the well-being of the family; the safeguarding of our environment; the value of education and workers’ rights; the importance of ethical entrepreneurship; the preservation of our patrimony; the value of good governance; and the rule of law.


Are we not obliged to conserve and safeguard such values? Are we not called to promote politics of values, rather than spin?


We do not seek to conserve the status quo. On the contrary, we seek to elucidate these core values while taking into account today’s realities.


Others may label us as being intolerant. On the contrary, mainstream conservatism strongly believes in pluralism and freedom of expression. On the other hand, conservatives who adopt views based on xenophobia, homophobia, misogyny and right-wing populism do a disservice to conservatism.


The Nationalist Party is also inspired by Christian ethos. It is for this reason that I consider myself a Christian Democrat, rather than a conservative. Although our Christian community does not always walk the talk, one must acknowledge the considerable contribution it has given and still gives to the educational, social, cultural and political sectors.


While I have no qualms acknowledging our past blunders, many were the occasions when the Nationalist Party made Malta proud. Our Independence; the modernisation of Malta; investment in education, social policies and the infrastructure; and membership of the EU and the euro are but a few examples of this. Currently, Roberta Metsola, a Nationalist Party MEP, is making us proud as the president of the European Parliament.


The Nationalist Party’s way forward is to take Malta to the next level, making our island truly a European state. Inspired by our core values, we must strive to make our institutions work independently, adopt a greener agenda, attract new niches of investments (as we have done in the past) and turn Malta into a hub of excellence, rather than a mediocre cheap-labour mafia-like state, as the Labour government has sadly reduced our nation to.


“They only think about themselves; we are different,” Abela rambled on.


Seriously? Who is pigging out? I am sure Rosianne Cutajar can provide us with a detailed catalogue of her former colleagues who are thinking about themselves.


Sadly, the Labour Party is beyond recognition. After years in the political wilderness, Joseph Muscat, in order to obtain power, sold off the party’s soul and principles. The Labour Party betrayed its core values and stopped being Labour. Sadly, Abela is the continuation of this political fallacy.


Currently, Labour is anything but Labour. Today’s version of Labour is an insult to Labour itself.


All the good done during these years in office has been overshadowed and tainted by its own politicians and adherents who sought (and are still seeking) their self-advancement.


The everlasting episodes of sleaze, cronyism, maladministration and rampant corruption, within the highest echelons of administration, confirm this degeneration. Regrettably, under Labour, skulduggery has become the new way of doing politics.


The Labour Party is an integral part of our democratic mosaic, as much as the Nationalist and other democratic parties are, but only if the Labour Party is true to itself and stops acting like champagne socialists and enabling fraudsters and opportunists to flourish to the detriment of the common good.


Yes, prime minister, we are different. Democracy compels us to be so.


(This article was published on Times of Malta – 1 May, 2023)

BACK
bottom of page