Opinion: The thin-skinned president

President George Vella had one last opportunity to show himself worthy of his office. It was meant to be his last Republic Day speech, but instead of using that opportunity to show graciousness, courtesy and tolerance, he used his privileged platform to attack “certain media outlets”.

He heaped scorn upon them in an attempt to discredit them. He accused them of “destructive criticism” and “mockery” and of throwing allegations about “without a care in the world”. 

He spent his self-obsessed speech licking his imaginary wounds and playing the victim while publicly attacking his critics. Which president uses his last Republic Day speech for petty vengefulness against those who dared call out Labour’s corruption?

In a country rocked by the brutal assassination of a journalist who was relentlessly demonised and dehumanised by Labour, the President chose to condemn “certain media outlets”.

In a country chastised internationally for its government’s hostility towards journalists, columnists and civil society activists, Vella chose to use his privileged position of power to incite the mob against “certain media outlets”.

He urged all those present at the Grandmaster’s Palace, including foreign diplomats, to ignore those “certain media outlets”. He publicly accused them of lying.

“Unfortunately, those who are not well versed in Maltese society, and who get their information only from what is published by certain media outlets, would get a completely opposite impression and would think there is no longer anything good left in our country,” the President declared.

The only thing left for the President was to call those media organisations “negative” to make sure that he was sticking strictly to Labour’s campaign of vilifying critics. 

George Vella has never really understood that the President’s role is not to be Labour’s chief propagandist.  Even during his last Republic Day speech, he couldn’t contain himself.

“I am not saying this to be controversial but because everyone knows that reality shows otherwise and because as the Head of the Maltese State, I feel hurt when I see our country being smeared in this way, especially in front of foreigners,” he added.

Vella shamelessly adopted Labour’s strategy of accusing those who condemn Labour’s corruption of “smearing” the nation. For George Vella, the ones Labour calls “traitors” and “enemies of the state” are the ones harming the country’s reputation.

It’s not the rampant corruption, the culture of impunity, the grotesque cronyism, the wasteful abuse of public funds, or the State’s hostility towards journalists that smear the country’s reputation for the President – it’s “certain media outlets”. 

The President is a sensitive soul.  He’s “hurt” because those “certain media outlets” smear the country “in front of foreigners”.

Vella still lives in the Mintoffian era of the Foreign Interference Act and is still steeped in an era of Soviet secrecy. He still thinks if we keep it all quiet between us, nobody will find out about the Mozura windfarm, the hospitals scandal, Electrogas, the Marsa flyover, the Azerbaijan-SOCAR deal, the DB ITS deal, the SVPR quarter billion scandal.

He thinks information only gets out in Morse code or via fax.

He demonstrated his hypersensitivity to criticism and his entitled self-centred antagonism by targeting those who called out his abject failures. 

“In a healthy democracy, everyone should be subject to public scrutiny, which includes criticism.  But the criticism should not mean mockery or ridicule.  Nor should it mean allegations thrown about without a care in the world or speculation that can fester as long as it is not libellous. It is even worse when this destructive criticism is aimed at those who, due to the nature of the office they occupy, are duty bound to keep silent and not to engage in public controversy,” the President said.

If the President is duty-bound to keep silent, George Vella failed his duty.  If his office demands avoiding public controversy, he hasn’t noticed.

To gain sympathy, he wallowed in self-pity. “There have been difficult times in which I deeply appreciated the words of solace and encouragement, just as I have felt hurt and saddened by unjustified words of contempt and mockery,” he added. 

Vella obsesses about his own “hurt” from “unjustified words of contempt” but isn’t bothered about the daily abuse suffered by those working with “certain media outlets”.

He’s not fussed about the personal attacks upon them by other media outlets, such as the Labour Party’s ONE TV. He’s not bothered about the real threats to which those journalists are subjected.  The serious intimidation and demonisation of those who dare speak up doesn’t fluster George Vella.

Labour’s attempt to financially wreck those “certain media outlets” with 40 SLAPPs using taxpayer money isn’t a concern for the President.  He doesn’t care about the journalists and columnists and activists who are subjected to constant intimidation, spat at and abused on the street and on social media, who receive anonymous letters in their personal letter box and at their workplace, who are ostracised and subjected to political vindictiveness, and threatened with legal letters and financial ruin. 

It’s not mere “hurt” those people suffer – they suffer the constant fear of physical violence, they fear for their families’ safety, and they don’t enjoy the protection of a flank of presidential bodyguards.  They’re not driven around in convoys of luxury vehicles with blacked-out windows and police outriders.

George Vella should be the father of the nation, but instead, he wails over his trivial scratch while ignoring the bleeding lacerations of his people. 

The Caruana Galizia inquiry recommended that the Expert Committee’s work to ensure adequate protection for journalists should be under the auspices of the President. Instead, Vella used his final Republic Day speech to join Labour’s relentless assault on “certain media outlets”. 

“My presidency ends in April next year,” he announced. Not a moment too soon.

                           

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14 Comments
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Mick
Mick
11 months ago

The most expensive incompetent pension chaser on the Island who has contributed nothing to the state. As head leech he would do well to shut his mouth and be grateful that no charges are currently pending against him unlike some of his protégés

Mark
Mark
11 months ago

Mhux aħjar jgħidilna x’jaf fuq il-qtil ta’ Raymond Caruana? X’mingħalih, se ninsew?

saviour mamo
saviour mamo
11 months ago

Any future statue or bust of George Vella should show his hands tied and his mouth taped.

KLAUS
KLAUS
11 months ago

For me, he will always be and remain the “Mickey Mouse President” who cared more about himself (and the house developments in his street) than Malta.
Just a kind of a welcoming clown.

Sad for him, a pity for Malta.

JOSEPH TEDESCO
JOSEPH TEDESCO
11 months ago

BRILLIANT WRITING PROFESSOR. 100% RIGHT. IT IS THE PL
GOVERNMENT THAT HAS DISGRACED MALTA BOTH
DOMESTICALLY AND INTERNATIONALLY AND NOBODY ELSE.
FOR GEORGE VELLA AND THE PL GOVERNMENT HURT IS
SELF-INFLICTED AND THIS TRUTH HURTS MUCH, MUCH
MORE.

chris
chris
11 months ago

Isn’t this the same guy who shooed out journalists in 2016 when he was meeting with the disgraceful British Foreign Affairs Secretary, Boris Johnson?

Much to the admiration of the other buffoon, Vella spewed, “Let’s have a handshake and get rid of these people”, referring to the press.

https://www.independent.com.mt/articles/2016-11-09/local-news/Boris-Johnson-avoids-speaking-with-press-after-meeting-with-Minister-George-Vella-6736166386

Clearly, this sensitive man-child has always been cowardly with the press.

Gerald
Gerald
11 months ago

Three emails sent to his office during the Dingli carob trees destruction saga. A half hearted automatic acknowledgement, no more. Tells a lot about character and empathy of this person – WEAK.

D M Briffa
D M Briffa
11 months ago
Reply to  Gerald

Non-existent.

Paul Berman
Paul Berman
11 months ago

Yet another unfit person in a role that requires far more than he is capable of. Wont be missed and this clearly shows how infantile our democracy is.

George Mangion Tune
11 months ago
Reply to  Paul Berman

Pity he has not forgotten how his young lawyer niece was catalpuled to a senior advisory job at Miriam Dalli’s ministry.Again Joe Cushieri happily married with his daughter was treated with kid gloves when caught galavanting in an all paid Las Vegas holiday with Jurgen Fenech ( owner of notorius 17 Black offshore company and alleged mastermind behind Daphne ‘s macabre murder) . Joe Cushieri as Chairman of MFSA was disgracefully sacked but was later given a high government job to compensate. What a president should do is lament for not giving a fatherly example of prudence to the nation.

Last edited 11 months ago by George Mangion Tune
Steve
Steve
11 months ago

The same critics who expect to have the right to vilify mock and ridicule but not to have it done to them. What’s good for the goose is good for the gander

Richard Spiteri
Richard Spiteri
11 months ago

“[…] and because as the Head of the Maltese State, I feel hurt when I see our country being smeared in this way, especially in front of foreigners …”

We Maltese have two options: hide our problems under the carpet in the hope ‘we won’t be smeared’; or to fix the root of the problem so you can ‘no longer be smeared’.

Voter’s choice

Last edited 11 months ago by Richard Spiteri
Steve
Steve
11 months ago

Expect he was very hurt that his squeaky clean son in law was found out and had to resign his MFSA CEO role. Miskien

Cynthia Houghton
Cynthia Houghton
11 months ago

He is a puppet never worthy of his position, only to do what he is told by our corrupt regime. Never defended our rights and principles. Shame on him.

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