On June 24, 2025, this site declared that history may well remember that date as the day the Nationalist Party lost the next general election. Why? Because on that day, Adrian Delia—the same man who had already dragged the PN into humiliation—officially announced his intention to run again for party leader.

Adrian Delia
The announcement was met not with excitement, but with dread. Even inside the PN’s own ranks, the reaction was more panic than celebration. The party that never learned its lesson is now condemned to repeat it.
And here we are today, just weeks later, watching the PN crown its fifth leader in the span of twelve years. Five leaders in twelve years: instability, not renewal. This is not reinvention. It is self-destruction on repeat.
The numbers speak louder than the speeches. Every single leader change since 2013 has brought the PN closer to irrelevance. Instead of crafting a vision, they’ve swapped faces. Instead of building unity, they’ve multiplied factions. Instead of planning for the future, they’ve fought over the past.

The PN Establishment
Alex Borg might carry the torch now, but the fire went out long ago. The PN is not led—it is managed by cliques, battered by egos, and suffocated by its own establishment. Delia’s re-entry into the scene only highlighted what most Maltese had already understood: this party is incapable of learning, incapable of changing, and incapable of winning.
Meanwhile, Labour marches forward with stability, consistency, and results. Families don’t want chaos; they want certainty. Workers don’t want endless feuds; they want opportunities. Business doesn’t want instability; it wants confidence. Labour provides all three.
So yes—June 24, 2025, will go down as the date the PN sealed its fate. The day they chose infighting over rebuilding. The day they made clear to the country that their internal battles matter more than the people’s needs. The day they lost the next general election.