Dr. George Abela was elected President of the Republic of
Malta on the 4th April 2009 following a Parliamentary
resolution which unanimously approved his nomination as the
eighth President of Malta. His nomination marks a historical
development in the constitutional history of our Island
since, for the first time after thirty four years, the
President was elected by the unanimous approval of both
political parties represented in Parliament. It is also the
first time that the Government of the day nominated a
President with different political leanings.
Dr. Abela was born in Qormi on the 22nd April 1948 and is
the son of a registered port worker. He was educated at the
Lyceum and the University of Malta where he first obtained
his Bachelor of Arts Degree in English, Maltese and History
and later on his Law Degree. He furthered his studies in
European Law and obtained his Magister Iuris Degree in 1995.
He also holds a Diploma to practise as a lawyer before the
Ecclesiastical Tribunals in marriage annulment cases.
Dr. Abela worked in private practice for thirty-three
years and has been a practising lawyer specialising in
Civil, Commercial and Industrial Law. He acted for twenty
five years as the legal consultant of the General Workers’
Union and he represented the workers’ interests, affiliated
in four separate trade unions, in the negotiations
concerning the Air Malta rescue plan in 2002. He also
represented port workers in the port reform of June 2007,
which reform has been hailed by the European Commission as a
model in social dialogue to be followed by other member
states. He also served as legal advisor to the Medical
Association of Malta and other house unions.
For many years, Dr. Abela has been deeply involved in the
administration of sports in Malta, particularly in football.
He first served as a treasurer in his village football club,
Qormi F.C., and later on as its President. In 1982, after
serving as Vice-President, he was elected to the post of
President of the Malta Football Association, which position
he held for ten years. During his presidency, the local
football association witnessed major changes at its
administrative and technical level. Large infrastructural
investments were made in the resurfacing of the turf pitch
at the National Stadium Ta’ Qali, which became wholly
managed for the first time by the football association; new
training grounds with turf pitches were built; floodlights
were installed both at the National Stadium and in the
adjoining training areas; a physiotherapy clinic and a fully
equipped gymnasium were also opened. Foreign full time
coaches, assisted by top Maltese coaches, were engaged to
take charge of the National teams and courses in coaching
and refereeing were held under the auspices of the European
and international football bodies. The players of the
National team were engaged for the first time on a full-time
professional basis and the international matches of the
Maltese team started to attract the wide support of the
Maltese sporting public once again. Football nurseries all
over the island were inaugurated. Dr. Abela represented the
local Association in many committees of UEFA. He also sat as
an arbitrator in the Court of Arbitration for Sport in
Lausanne.
Furthermore, Dr. Abela was also involved in the Kerygma
Movement, where he acted for some years as Chairman for the
Campaign – Solidarity Through Sports, in aid of
Philanthropic Institutions.
In 1992, after ten years in the top echelons of the
Maltese football, Dr. Abela was elected as Deputy Leader of
the Malta Labour Party in charge of Party Affairs. In 1996,
the Malta Labour Party won the general election.
Subsequently, he was appointed as the legal consultant to
the Prime Minister and invited to attend cabinet meetings.
Dr. George Abela served for a number of years as Director
of the Central Bank of Malta and as Executive Director for
the Bank of Valletta p.l.c. He was also a member of the
Electoral Commission responsible for the running of the
general elections in 1987. He actively participated in the
Malta E.U. Steering and Action Committee (MEUSAC) in
pre-accession negotiations for membership in the European
Union, where he formed part of the core group focusing on
the legal and social aspects of membership. After
membership, he sat again on MEUSAC as the Labour Party
representative.
Dr. Abela is married to Margaret nee’ Cauchi and they
have two children, Robert and Maria.