The Dinner Party: Why Malta’s Menu is Stuck in 1964

Imagine a dinner party where you’re only allowed to choose between steak or fish—forever. No vegan options, no fusion, and definitely no dessert unless the majority agrees. This is the reality of political pluralism in Malta. While the rest of the world grapples with the complexity of the 2020s, our political system remains a tug-of-war between two giants, leaving a generation of thinkers, activists, and innovators standing on the sidelines with no team to join.

But this isn’t just a metaphor for a boring Saturday night; it’s the blueprint of the Maltese Parliament. For decades, our political landscape has been a duopoly—a two-headed giant where the Labor Party (PL) and the Nationalist Party (PN) take turns holding the keys to the castle.

In the 2024 European elections, we saw a crack in the armour. The traditional “super-majorities” started to crumble, and a record number of people looked elsewhere. Yet, because of a system rigged for stability over diversity, the outcome remained the same: Red and Blue. To the outside world, Malta looks like a stable democracy. To those of us living here, it feels like a stagnant equilibrium where fresh ideas go to die because they don’t fit into a pre-approved colour scheme.

In April 2024, I sat across from the newly elected President of the Republic, Myriam Spiteri Debono, during the TV programme Popolin. My question was simple: How can we tackle the lack of pluralism and the suffocating two-party system that defines our islands?

Her response was telling. She admitted that the current system doesn’t exactly ‘help’ young people get into politics. It was a rare moment of institutional honesty, but it left a hollow ring. Recognising that the door is locked is one thing; handing over the key is another.

The President’s answer focused on the difficulty of entry, but it sidestepped the why. The ‘why’ is that our political structure isn’t just failing to invite young people in—it is actively designed to keep the room small. When the highest representative of the State acknowledges the system is broken but can’t offer a roadmap to fix it, you realise that pluralism won’t be handed down from the palace; it has to be demanded from the streets.

In most democracies, the media is the “Fourth Estate”—a watchdog that keeps politicians in check. In Malta, the watchdog isn’t just on a leash; it’s being fed treats by the people it’s supposed to be barking at.

The Duopoly on Truth

Malta remains a bizarre global outlier. It is one of the only places in the democratic world where the two main political parties—ONE (Labour) and NET (Nationalist)—own and operate their own nationwide TV stations, radio frequencies, and digital newsrooms.

Think about the sheer scale of that influence. In a country of 500,000 people, the “news” is curated by political machines. This creates a dual-reality infrastructure:

If an independent candidate has a breakthrough idea on urban planning or digital privacy, where do they go? They aren’t invited to the party-owned studios unless it’s to be used as a political football.

These stations don’t just report news; they manufacture loyalty. They turn every national issue—from the economy to the environment—into a binary conflict. This effectively “lobotomises” public debate, leaving no room for the nuanced, multi-dimensional thinking that 2026 demands.

It’s not just about the screen; it’s about the money. Running a TV station is expensive. By pouring millions into their own media empires, the big parties ensure that any “Third Voice” is financially drowned out before they even buy a microphone.

We’re obsessed with “disrupting” industries like tech and finance, but in Malta, the “Political Industry” has built a firewall against disruption. They own the platform, the players, and the referee.

When media is a party tool, “truth” ceases to be an objective goal and becomes a tactical advantage. This creates a generation of voters who don’t look for facts; they look for “their side’s version” of the facts. For a young activist trying to build a pluralistic future, this is the ultimate boss fight. You aren’t just fighting for a policy change; you’re fighting an entire broadcasting infrastructure designed to make sure your voice is never “broadcast-ready.

Stability vs. Representation

If the media is the megaphone, the Constitution is the doorframe—and currently, it’s built to only fit two specific shapes.

Malta uses a system called Single Transferable Vote (STV). On paper, it’s one of the most democratic systems in the world because it allows you to rank candidates (1, 2, 3…). In theory, this should be a playground for pluralism. In reality, it has been “hacked” by decades of constitutional amendments that prioritise “stability” over “representation.”

The biggest hurdle is the Strict Proportionality Amendment. It sounds fair, right? It ensures that the party with the most first-preference votes gets enough seats to govern. But there’s a catch: it only applies if exactly two parties are elected to Parliament. If a third party—let’s say a green party or a digital-first party—earns 5% of the national vote but doesn’t win an individual district seat, those votes essentially vanish into the limestone. The system then “corrects” itself to make sure the Big Two have a clear winner, effectively deleting the “Third Voice” from the final count.

We saw a classic example of this “Two-Party Only” logic with the Gender Balance Reform. To address the lack of women in politics, the law adds up to 12 extra seats to Parliament. But again, the fine print says this mechanism only kicks in if only two parties make it to the House.

The law literally incentivises a two-party reality. It says, “We want more women, but only if they belong to the Red or Blue teams.”

This legal structure creates a secondary, more dangerous problem: The Wasted Vote Syndrome. Because young voters know the system is rigged against “outsiders,” they are pressured into voting for the “lesser of two evils” rather than the “best of the bunch.”

We’re told that voting for a third party is “throwing your vote away.” But in 2026, the real waste is voting for a system that admits it’s broken but refuses to change the locks.

Power Without a Choice: The Irony of Vote 16

Malta made headlines across the EU when it became a pioneer of Vote 16, handing the keys of democracy to a generation that actually has to live with the long-term consequences of today’s policies. On paper, it was a victory for youth. In practice, it’s like being given a high-performance car but being told you can only drive it in a circle between two specific garages.

Politicians love to talk about “youth engagement.” They show up at University debates, they launch “Youth Advisory Forums,” and they post Tiktoks trying to use our slang. But there is a massive difference between consultation and representation.

To get a seat at the table in Malta, you usually have to “pay your dues” in the youth wings of the two main parties. This means by the time a young person actually reaches Parliament, their original, disruptive ideas have often been sanded down to fit the party line.

Our generation doesn’t think in binaries. We understand that you can be pro-business and radical about the environment; that you can value tradition and demand absolute digital transparency. The “Red vs. Blue” map of the 20th century doesn’t have the coordinates for 2026.

For our grandparents, political identity was a heritage—you were born into a “Labour family” or a “Nationalist family.” For us, identity is fluid and based on values.

Without third, fourth, or fifth parties to act as “Watchdogs” within Parliament, the two giants can afford to ignore youth-specific issues (like the insane property market or mental health funding) because they know we have nowhere else to go.

Handing a 16-year-old a ballot paper and then telling them “don’t waste your vote on a third party” is a form of democratic gaslighting. True empowerment isn’t just the right to click a box; it’s the right to a diverse political menu that reflects the reality of our lives.

If we are old enough to choose our careers, our identities, and our futures, we are old enough to choose a party that hasn’t been running the same script since before the internet was invented.

The 2026 Manifesto: Demand a Spectrum, Not a Binary

We are currently living in a political “fever dream” where we are told that the only way to save the country is to defeat the “other side.” But as we’ve seen, when the system is a duopoly, the only real winner is the status quo.

When President Myriam Spiteri Debono spoke to me on Popolin, she touched on the difficulty of the system. Since then, her presidency has often called for “national unity.” But true unity isn’t everyone wearing the same coloured scarf; it’s a society where a multitude of voices can coexist without being “corrected” out of the conversation.

If the President—and the State—truly want to help young people into politics, the “help” shouldn’t be a mentorship programme or a seat on a powerless advisory board. It should be:

  1. A system where 5% of the national vote equals 5% of the seats in Parliament. Period.
  2. A legal “divorce” between political parties and broadcasting licenses.

  3. A cultural shift where we stop voting out of fear of the “other” and start voting for the vision we actually want.

To go back to our dinner party: if the host admits the kitchen is cramped and the menu is stagnant, it is no longer the guests’ job to “try and enjoy the meal.” It is our job to rewrite the menu.

Malta is a small island with a massive history of survival and adaptation. We have outlasted empires, but our current challenge is surviving our own political binary. Pluralism isn’t a threat to stability; it is the upgrade that democracy needs to survive the complexities of the 21st century.

As we look toward the next election cycle, the message from our generation is clear: We aren’t interested in being the “future leaders” of an obsolete system. We are the current citizens of a country that deserves a spectrum, not a binary.

It’s time to stop choosing the “lesser of two evils” and start demanding the “greatest of many goods.”

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