Since independence on 1964, two parties have dominated Malta's polarized and evenly divided politics during this period: the centre-right
Nationalist Party and the centre-left
Labour Party. From the pre-independence
1962 general election until 2017, third parties failed to score any electoral success. In the
2013 election, the
Democratic Alternative (a
green party established in 1989) managed to secure only 1.8% of the first preference votes nationwide. The 1996 elections resulted in the election of the Labour Party, by 8,000 votes, to replace the Nationalists, who had won in 1987 and 1992. Voter turnout was characteristically high at 96%, with the Labour Party receiving 50.72%, the Nationalist Party 47.8%, the
Democratic Alternative 1.46%, and independent candidates 0.02%. In 1998, the Labour Party's loss in a parliamentary vote led the prime minister to call an early election. The Nationalist Party was returned to office in September 1998 by a majority of 13,000 votes, holding a five-seat majority in Parliament. Voter turnout was 95%, with the Nationalist Party receiving 51.81%, the Labour Party 46.97%, the Democratic Alternative 1.21%, and independent candidates 0.01%. By the end of 2002 the Nationalist government wrapped up negotiations for
European Union membership. A
referendum on the issue was called in March 2003, for which the Nationalists and the Democratic Alternative campaigned for a "yes" vote while Labour campaigned heavily for "no" vote, invalidate their vote or abstain. Turnout was 91%, with more than 53% voting "yes". The Labour Party argued that the "yes" votes amounted to less than 50% of the overall votes, hence, and citing the
1956 Maltese United Kingdom integration referendum as an example, they claimed that the "yes" had not in fact won the referendum. The then MLP Leader
Alfred Sant said that the general election which was to be held within a month would settle the affair. In the general elections the Nationalists were returned to office with 51.79% of the vote to Labour's 47.51%. The Democratic Alternative polled 0.68%. The Nationalists were thus able to form a government and sign and ratify the EU Accession Treaty on 16 April 2003. On 1 May 2004 Malta joined the EU and on 1 January 2008, the
Eurozone with the
euro as the national currency. The first elections after membership were held in March 2008 resulting in a narrow victory for the Nationalist Party with 49.34% of first preference votes. In May 2011, a nationwide
referendum was held on the introduction of
divorce. This was the first time in the history of parliament that Parliament approved a motion originating outside from the Cabinet. In March 2013, the Labour Party returned to government after fifteen years in opposition with a record-breaking lead of 36,000 votes leading to the resignation of the Nationalist leader
Lawrence Gonzi, and
Joseph Muscat became prime minister. In June 2017, the Labour Party called in a snap election on its
May Day celebrations and increased its vote disparity to around 40,000 votes. The then leader of the opposition,
Simon Busuttil, announced his resignation shortly thereafter. This election saw the first third party elected to Malta's Parliament since independence, with the election of
Marlene Farrugia in the 10th District representing the
Democratic Party.
Joseph Muscat continued to be prime minister In January 2020, he stepped down after the
2019 Malta political crisis surrounding the car bombing of investigative journalist
Daphne Caruana Galizia.
Robert Abela - the son of Malta's former president
George Abela - elected a new leader of Labour Party and new prime minister of Malta in January 2020. Democratic Alternative and the Democratic Party merged into a new party,
AD+PD, on 17 October 2020. In March 2022, the ruling Labour party, led by Prime Minister Robert Abela, won its third successive
election. It gained even bigger victory than in 2013 and in 2017. ==Executive branch==