As news of Robert Abela’s cabinet continues to make waves on Maltese media, other politicians are looking at alternative means of getting into Parliament. Be it through the gender corrective mechanism or casual election as a result of their party colleagues performing well on both of their electoral districts, here’s who could get into Parliament despite not being elected directly last weekend.
The Casual Elections
Earlier today, news started making the rounds of PL candidate Rebecca Buttigieg getting elected to Parliament via casual election while editor of Labour’s English language website ‘The Journal’ Randolph Debattista will be co-opted. These two new entries came as a result of Clifton Grima and Michael Falzon giving up their seats on the 9th district and keeping the 10th, being elected on both.
In the second district, Labour MPs Oliver Scicluna, Joe Mizzi and former government whip Glenn Bedingfield all await a green light from Abela, as is former BOV director James Grech, who performed better than all three last weekend. Meanwhile, in the third district, the Nationalist Party’s Janice Chetcuti, John Baptist Camilleri, Carm Mifsud Bonnici and Mary Muscat all aspire for Stephen Spiteri’s now-vacated seat after he performed well on the 2nd. Labour’s Alicia Bugeja Said, Ray Abela and Jean Claude Micallef could occupy Chris Fearne’s spot.
In the fourth district, Oliver Scicluna seems likely to secure a seat in parliament whilst Katya De Giovanni, Glenn Bedingfield and Amanda Spiteri Grech remain credible competition for the previously co-opted MP. The fifth district is set to welcome as many as four new MPs. With Bernard Grech giving up his seat, Stanley Zammit is reportedly almost-certainly set to occupy it. On the Labour side, Omar Farrugia, Jean Claude Micallef and Joe Sammut could all be likely candidates to fill Robert Abela, Miriam Dalli and Owen Bonnici’s potentially vacated seats.
Labour’s Rosianne Cutajar may be set on the sixth district, with formidable opponents in Malcolm Paul Agius Galea, Omar Farrugia and Katya De Giovanni whilst four seats could be up for grabs on District 7. Front-runners include Malcolm Paul Agius Galea and Naomi Cachia on the Labour side whilst candidates like Rebekah Cilia, Edwin Vassallo or Charles Azzopardi could occupy one of Ryan Callus and Adrian Delia’s vacated seats from the PN ticket.
The eighth district remains somewhat of a gray-area, with Labour contenders like Oliver De Gaetano and Felix Busuttil Galea looking to secure a spot. With four seats up for grabs on District 9, potential entries include Eve Borg Bonello, Jason Azzopardi, Albert Buttigieg, Noel Muscat and Emma Portelli Bonnici on the PN side.
Labour’s Felix Busuttil Galea, Damian Spiteri and Dario Vella could steal an MP spot in District 10 whilst anyone from Eve Borg Bonello, Emma Portelli Bonnici, Albert Buttigieg, Noel Muscat, Graziella Attard Previ and Karol Aquilina could look to contest Mark Anthony Sammut’s vacated seat. Meanwhile, Anthony Agius Decelis and Mosta Mayor Romilda Baldacchino Zarbcould occupy a seat on District 11.
The Gender Corrective Mechanism
With only four woman getting elected in this election’s initial count, Malta’s recently-approved gender corrective mechanism could welcome as many as 12 new seats into parliament to ensure that 40% of parliamentary seats are occupied by woman. Unelected candidates will receive a rank based on the number of votes by the time they exited the electoral race.
In order of vote count (highest to lowest), female candidates who could make use of the gender corrective mechanism are Labour’s Rosianne Cutajar, Alicia Bugeja Said, Rebecca Buttigieg, Cressida Galea, Abigail Camilleri, Katya De Giovanni, Romilda Baldacchino Zarb, Amanda Spiteri Grech, Naomi Cachia and Davina Sammut Hili.
On the PN side, eligible candidates include Janice Chetcuti, Paula Mifsud Bonnici, Julie Zahra, Bernice Bonello, Rebekah Cilia, Claudette Buttigieg, Eve Borg Bonello, Emma Portelli Bonnici, Alessia Psaila Zammit and Maria Deguara.
Who do you want to see in Parliament?
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