A response issued by unelected MP Jason Azzopardi following remarks by PN leader Bernard Grech has sparked an internal investigation.
Despite recognising all the work Azzopardi had done, especially as lawyer to the Caruana Galizia family, the Opposition leader said that every politician had to accept that their political journey had an expiry date.
This follows Azzopardi’s failure to get elected in the fourth district and the ninth district, after he was replaced by fresh new faces. Grech also denied that the party had worked against the campaign of the former PN MP on Radio 103 on Friday.
Azzopardi however responded on social media by saying that ‘it seems those who read the expiry dates of others often forget their own shelf life’. Another statement followed, saying that he had stopped a donation to the party from somebody seeking a presidential pardon for a relative.
“It’s easy inventing an expiry date. Maybe that was because I was an obstacle to a donation from someone who wanted a presidential pardon for their relative, right?”
Following this, the PN leader announced that the party will be holding an administrative council meeting to discuss Azzopardi’s allegations that funds were received by the party for the presidential pardon.
Grech categorically denied the accusation, saying that it is very serious and that the party wants to leave no shadow upon itself.
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