President (1988 - 1989) In 1988, he was elected President of the Labour Party and served until 1989 when he had to resign from the party after taking a stand against corruption and criminal elements within the party.
Co-founder of Malta's Green Party (1989) That same year, he co-founded
Alternattiva Demokratika, Malta's
Green Party, together with the then Labour Party whip
Wenzu Mintoff, espousing environmental issues, equality of gender, political transparency and a fairer electoral system with the introduction of a national quota to allow small political parties to be represented in Parliament on the line of the German model. Campaigned in favour of the introduction of the Whistle Blower Act, Freedom of Information Act, the abolishment of the institute of prescription in case of abuse of power and corruption by public officials and the need of a Party Financing Law.
Deputy Mayor of Ħamrun (1993) In 1993 he was elected as Deputy Mayor of
Ħamrun, a major town in Malta, and was responsible for law enforcement and management of the citizens' complaints bureau. He also introduced the first bye-laws and established the first local Court.
Labour Party Deputy Leader (Party Affairs) (2008 - 2016) He was elected Deputy Leader for Party Affairs on 12 June 2008. Apart from his general responsibilities of running and managing the Party's internal affairs, he also monitored 65 political Labour Party outlets. He also set standards of good governance to 39 Labour Local Councils and saw that these standards are upheld. During his tenure, Labour Party went through radical changes at all levels of organisation. ; Allegations of drug cover-up During the
2013 General Election campaign a recording emerged of Abela's admitting knowledge to a large quantity of cocaine being kept at a Labour Party club. The recording infers that, rather than reporting the matter to the police, Abela personally dealt with it internally. However, the Police Commissioner stated that there was no case against Toni Abela.
Civil Court Judge Abela was nominated by the
Government of Malta to serve as a member of the
European Court of Auditors but this nomination was rejected. From 2016 until retirement he served as a judge presiding over the First Hall of the Civil Court of Malta.
Commissioner for Standards of the Judiciary On 12 December 2025, Toni Abela was sworn in as Malta’s first Commissioner for Standards of the Judiciary, in charge of investigating ethical breaches and public complaints against
judges and magistrates and submit findings to the Chief Justice and Justice Minister (not to re-evaluate court sentences). Abela was appointed by the
Commission for the Administration of Justice of Malta, following legislative amendments aimed to enhance public trust in the judiciary. == See also ==