Robert Abela

Minister

Birthday December 7, 1977

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Sliema, Malta

Age 46 years old

Nationality Malta

#34592 Most Popular

1977

Robert Abela (born 7 December 1977) is a Maltese lawyer and politician who has served as prime minister of Malta and leader of Labour Party since 2020.

1990

Abela also practised bodybuilding, competing twice in the national championships in the late 1990s.

Abela studied law at the University of Malta, where he met his future wife Lydia.

1996

Abela became involved in politics while his father George Abela was deputy party leader, supporting the party in the 1996 general election.

He claimed that he started off transporting sick people to the polling stations in 1996, and worked behind the scenes for many years in other roles, such as representing the party on current affairs programmes as requested by Joseph Muscat and lately as his legal advisor in Cabinet.

2002

He graduated in 2002.

Following his graduation, he worked in the family's Abela Advocates law firm, specialising in industrial and labour law.

2008

He also supported his father in the failed Labour leadership bid against Joseph Muscat in 2008, after Alfred Sant's resignation.

2009

Born in Sliema in the Northern Harbour District, to George Abela, a former President of Malta (2009–2014) and his wife Margaret (née Cauchi).

Abela grew up with his sister Marija in Għaxaq and Marsaskala in the south of Malta.

Their mother, Margaret, worked in the administration of the Old University in Valletta and later managed the family's law firm.

Robert attended the Sisters' School in Santa Luċija and St Francis primary school in Bormla, to then continue secondary school and sixth form at St Aloysius' College.

A football player in his youth, he played in goal for the national youth team.

2013

His law firm's contract with Malta's Planning Authority predates Labour's election in 2013 and has been renewed yearly since.

Abela has been criticised for benefiting from direct orders for legal services for public entities, including Enemalta and Transport Malta.

After 2013, Abela Advocates held a licence (IIP 161) for the sale of Maltese citizenship (Individual Investors Programme), in the name of Robert's wife Lydia.

2017

The son of former President George Abela, he was elected to Parliament in 2017.

On 25 January 2017, Abela highlighted that a patch of land in his native Qormi was seriously undervalued during the previous Partit Nazzjonalista administration, where contractors paid €0.9 million instead of the full value of €8 million.

Abela was described as appealing to voters with no political ties, as well as the perfect replacement to attract Marie Louise Coleiro Preca's votes in the sixth district of Siggiewi, Luqa and Qormi.

He had already been approached; however, he chose his legal profession over politics.

In June 2017, at the age of 40, he was elected to the Parliament of Malta after his first attempt at contesting the sixth district, including Siggiewi, Luqa and Qormi, was successful.

He also served as legal adviser to the Prime Minister Joseph Muscat, which enabled him to attend the meetings of the Council of Ministers.

The Opposition claimed that his private consultancy contracts with the Planning Authority and Transport Malta earned him at least €580,000.

2018

In 2018, Robert Abela declared that no conflict of interest arose from his acting as legal representative of Air Malta while his father, former President George Abela, was the mediator and chief negotiator in talks with its pilots.

2019

In October 2019 Abela stated that more police were needed on Malta's streets to tackle residents' migration-related concerns.

In his years at the Parliament, Abela was never an outspoken critic of Muscat; in the fallout of the Daphne Caruana Galizia murder, he remarked that he would have "acted earlier" to remove minister Konrad Mizzi and chief of staff Keith Schembri from their posts had he been the leader.

Following the announcement of Joseph Muscat's upcoming resignation due to the assassination of Daphne Caruana Galizia, and the ensuing protests, deputy prime minister Chris Fearne was considered the front-runner to replace Muscat as leader of the party and Prime Minister, and other hopefuls (including Ian Borg and Miriam Dalli) were reportedly pressured not to run in order to allow a quick transition by Christmas 2019 with the formality of a vote by party members for a single candidate.

Robert Abela remarked that he did not want to be a part of any "diabolical pact", and presented his candidacy as an alternative to Chris Fearne.

However, according to James Debono, Abela was soon recognised as the "continuity" candidate instead of Fearne, emphasising stability, unity and normality, as opposed to the bolder changes advocated by Fearne.

Abela's leadership campaign was focused on party members and aimed at striking a chord with the traditional Labour themes (social housing, free medicines for the elderly and better employment conditions for blue-collar workers) while distancing himself from the coziness of Muscat with big business.

He also called for a crack-down on cheap labour migrant workers, who he accused of repressing local salaries, by proposing that employers be allowed to hire foreigners only if able to pay them fully on the books and while respecting work condition regulations.

He also guaranteed the continuation of Malta's controversial citizenship-by-investment programme.

Abela, a backbencher with no ministerial experience, presented himself as a candidate of continuity, pledging to maintain the same cabinet as Muscat's, as well as the same staff at the powerful Office of the Prime Minister, in opposition to Chris Fearne, whose campaign for a clean slate at Castille created apprehension among insiders.

Abela was openly critical of the 2019 Malta political crisis surrounding the Daphne Caruana Galizia car bombing.

In fact, on 28 November 2019, he claimed that the Labour Party would need deep rooted changes rather than superficial ones.

Abela also claimed that the only purpose of the 2019 Maltese protests was provocation.

Abela stated that his family law firm headed by his wife should retain the right to bid for public tenders, should he take up office.

Following controversies, he later backtracked and committed not to seek public contracts for his family law firm.

2020

Abela was sworn in as prime minister following the resignation of Joseph Muscat on 13 January 2020.

The licence was dropped in early 2020 once Abela became Prime Minister.