( dpa )- Malta's Labour Party appeared to be heading for victory as vote-counting began Sunday following Saturday's poll.
A total of 93 per cent of the electorate cast their vote in Malta's first election since EU membership - a low turnout by Maltese standards.
Although official figures were not expected until later Sunday, party officials said they expected a clear swing in favour of Labour .
The three per cent drop in votes since the 2003 election was perceived as a protest abstention vote against the ruling Nationalist Party.
If so, 60-year-old Alfred Sant will be sworn in as Prime Minister for a second time, after a brief 22-month stint at the helm in the late 1990s.
He is best-known for having frozen Malta's EU membership bid and for replacing value added tax (VAT) with a hotchpotch of taxes, but his party has now adopted a neutral stand on these issues following two election defeats.
Campaigning over five weeks saw a first few days of constructive criticism and debate degenerate into accusations of corruption, mud- slinging and below-the-belt jabs.