It may be costing the PN more than one percentage point, but
they are absolutely right in calling the PL a proxy-Nationalist party. The
strategy adopted by the PL has the purpose to give us the message that there is
no big difference between the two parties. This is evident from the new image
the PL has adopted quite a while ago - blue ties, blue background, the
occasional use of English words and the parading of ex-PN sympathisers who have
joined them. It is even more evident in the policies they have adopted - pro-Europe,
pro-businesses, pro-church schools and most evidently pro middle class. They
have even promised to adopt the budget for 2013 proposed by the PN in its entirety,
while a good chunk from the 800 proposals from their manifesto are actually a continuation
of the policies put into practice by the Gonzi administration. Indeed, it
sometimes gets tricky for anyone who is not an avid follower of Maltese
politics to identify speakers on TV with their party.
The rationale behind this strategy is very obvious. The last
election had the lowest turnout since Independence. The vast majority of those
who opted not to vote had opted for PN in the previous election while the vast
majority of the PL supporters casted their vote. And yet the PN still managed
to clinch a victory. It was therefore clear that if the PL didn't make itself
more attractive to ex-PN voters, it would never be in government. There were
various ways how they could have achieved this, but the one chosen was to
emulate the PN in almost its totality.
At face value, this strategy seems clever indeed as it has
put the PN in an awkward position. How can the PN criticise the policies put
forward by the PL, if they are the same ones they have been putting into
practice for the past two decades?
This incredible strategy seems to have taken the PN so much
by surprise that the only way how they reacted to it was to claim they have been
copied. Had they been thinking more straight they would have used it in their
favour. When the PL chose to emulate the PN, the PL is playing a very dangerous
game. In so doing they are actually
admitting that they have been wrong all throughout, while the PN have been
right.


