One election. Zero results. A campaign run by fossils. And they expect you to believe they’re the future?
The Nationalist Party’s leadership race has officially turned into a circus — and Adrian Delia is its head clown.
The latest comedy act? The desperate narrative pushed by Delia’s camp that he’s more “experienced” than his rival Alex Borg. Why? Because he’s older? Because he’s surrounded by ghosts of the past? Let’s get serious.
Here are the facts:
Alex Borg is 30. Adrian Delia is pushing 60.
Both contested exactly one general election: 2022.
So where’s this supposed “vast experience” Delia keeps preaching about?
The answer: in his imagination — and in the tired slogans fed to him by a washed-up entourage clinging to relevance.

The Fossil Campaign: Peppi, Beirut,Sapiano, and the Delia Delusion
The Expired Delia Clique: Fossils from a Bygone Era
Let’s take a look at who’s running the Delia campaign:
- Peppi Azzopardi — a long-retired broadcaster trying to play political strategist, still acting like it’s the 90s and Xarabank is breaking news.
- Joe Borg — a foul-mouthed, self-styled priest whose language would make a sailor blush, preaching purity while bathing in political spite.
- Georg Sapiano — a failed politician who tried his luck and flopped, now pretending to be relevant behind the scenes.
This isn’t a campaign team — it’s a reunion of the irrelevant.
And yet they think the public is stupid enough to fall for the line that Delia is “more experienced”? Based on what, exactly? One lost election? A short-lived, scandal-ridden tenure as PN leader? A career built on noise and collapsed on failure?
They must really think everyone’s a jackass.

A Tired Man with a Tired Message
A Tired Man with a Tired Message
Delia’s comeback isn’t built on renewal — it’s built on recycling. He’s repackaging old failures as new wisdom. He’s using the same broken script, the same old faces, and the same delusions of grandeur.
He claims to be a bridge-builder, but he can’t even unite his own past with his present. He says he’ll bring experience — but his only “experience” is dragging the party into its darkest days.
Meanwhile, Alex Borg— at least has his career ahead of him. Delia? He’s got nothing ahead but his retirement speech.
Conclusion: Don’t Buy the Lie
This isn’t a contest between experience and inexperience. It’s a contest between two men who lost the same election, but one of them is surrounded by people who think Malta never moved past 2008.
Adrian Delia’s experience is expired. His team is irrelevant. And his time is over.
Let’s stop pretending otherwise.