Alex Agius Saliba

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alex Agius Saliba
Member of the European Parliament
for Malta
Assumed office
1 July 2019
Personal details
Born (1988-01-31) 31 January 1988 (age 36)
Pietà, Malta
Political partyLabour Party (national)
Socialists & Democrats (European)
Alma materUniversity of Malta
ProfessionLawyer
Websitefacebook.com/alexagiussaliba

Alex Agius Saliba (born 31 January 1988) is a Maltese politician, Member of the European Parliament since 2019[1] for the Labour Party.

Biography[edit]

Born Alex Saliba, he studied at Tarxien primary school and at St. Augustine's College.[2]

At 17 years, he joined the Labour students' organisation Pulse, and later the Labour Party youth branch, Forum Żgħażagħ Laburisti, both of which he presided till 2017.[2]

Saliba worked as a journalist for One Productions (the Labour party media house) from 2008 till 2013. After graduating as lawyer, in 2013-2017 he advised several Labour ministers, including Helena Dalli and Ian Borg, and Parliamentary Secretary Stefan Buontempo. In 2017-2018 he headed the EU Secretariat.[2]

For 10 years, Saliba was also a member of the Labour Party's National Executive – a post to which he was elected with the largest number of votes from delegates in 2018. The same year, he was offered by Prime Minister Joseph Muscat to contest the 2019 European Parliament election in Malta.[citation needed]

In 2018 Saliba married Sarah Agius, former mayor of Żebbuġ.[3] They reside in Siġġiewi.

With 35,823 votes of preference, in May 2019 Agius Saliba was elected at the European Parliament. He served as rapporteur of the Digital Services Act, a role for which Politico Europe listed him as one of the 20 MEPs to watch during 2020.[citation needed] In December 2021 he was elected as one of the nine vice-presidents of the S&D group.[4]

In March 2024, Saliba was one of twenty MEPs to be given a "Rising Star" award at The Parliament Magazine's annual MEP Awards[5][6]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Electoral Commission of Malta". electoral.gov.mt. Retrieved 10 June 2019.
  2. ^ a b c CV
  3. ^ Lovin Malta
  4. ^ Newsbook
  5. ^ "MEP Awards 2024 - The Rising Stars". The Parliament Magazine. 21 March 2024. Retrieved 26 March 2024.
  6. ^ "Award for Alex Agius Saliba by the Parliament Magazine". Times of Malta . 21 March 2024. Retrieved 26 March 2024.