‘Short-Termism At Its Worst’: Metsola Warns Citizenship Scheme Was Reckless

European Parliament President Roberta Metsola has welcomed the European Court of Justice’s decision that Malta’s citizenship-by-investment scheme violates EU law by commercialising the acquisition of EU nationality.
Metsola described the programme as a short-term “get-rich-quick scheme” that was implemented with “legal and economic recklessness”, damaging the country’s reputation and leaving major security gaps in the EU.
“Today the court has established what we have always known: The acquisition of Union citizenship cannot result from a commercial transaction,” Metsola said.
“For the best part of the last decade, we have warned that selling Maltese passports and EU citizenship to third country nationals without any genuine link violates EU law, and that the decision to hook up the nation’s economy on this get-rich-quick scheme was legal and economic recklessness, that undermined our economic strategy, damaged our reputation and left huge holes in the security of our country and our Union.”
“It was short-termism at its worst that has left the weakest Prime Minister Malta has ever known, exposed.”
“They are stuck, out of ideas, with no other plans to grow our economy, and back to their same tired playbook of blaming invisible enemies instead of owning up to their own tragic errors of judgement.”
“Malta deserves better. Malta deserves strong leadership, with a long-term economic vision that creates new jobs, new sustainable niches, new dreams for our young people, new prosperity and stability for our businesses. That invests in infrastructure and our justice system. That puts our country on the map for the right reasons. That grows our economy.”
“This is not a moment for gloating. It is a moment for responsibility and mature discussions away from the hyper-partisanship that the Prime Minister finds comfort in. That’s how we can move forward. It is a discussion we should have had 12 years ago. A new way of politics is possible.”