When Politics Becomes Alimony: The Delia Dilemma

Neville Gafa

~ 1 day ago

When Politics Becomes Alimony: The Delia Dilemma

Delia’s Comeback Is a Cover for a Cash Crisis

 

 

From Leader to Liability: Delia’s Pocketing the Party

 

 

The Nationalist Party is at a crossroads again.

 

And one of the two men vying to become its next leader is Adrian Delia, the comeback candidate who left behind chaos, division, and a party in financial and political shambles.

 

But this time, there’s more than just politics at stake.

 

There’s also Delia’s personal bank account — and the PN’s.

 

Is Delia Using the PN as His Personal ATM?

 

 

Let’s Talk Numbers

 

If Adrian Delia is elected as PN leader, he will be entitled to a €45,000 yearly package.

 

That’s public record.

 

Now, here’s what’s also public:

 

Delia is legally bound to pay €3,000 per month in alimony and child support to his ex-wife and children.

 

That’s €36,000 a year — an obligation imposed by court.

 

So let’s do the simple math:

 

€45,000 income – €36,000 in alimony = €9,000 left for Delia to live on for the year.

 

That’s €750 a month to cover all other expenses, travel, clothing, fuel, and political commitments.

 

Not even minimum wage.

 

 

So Here’s the Real Question:

 

If Delia becomes PN leader again, and receives a party-funded salary;

 

Is the Nationalist Party going to be directly or indirectly funding these obligations?

 

Is this the “New Way”?

 

A political party on the verge of bankruptcy, drowning in €45 million in debt — being used as a financial cushion for one man’s personal obligations?

 

This isn’t about attacking his private life.

 

This is about financial integrity and transparency — values the PN claims to defend.

 

Because once Delia is installed as leader, every cent he receives from the party will be tied to legal obligations he is court-bound to fulfill.

 

 

PN delegates must ask themselves:

 

Are we about to elect a leader who needs the party to survive financially?

 

Is this leadership bid a matter of principle, or a matter of personal cash flow?

 

You don’t need a political analyst to answer that.

 

You only need a calculator.

 

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