Business Day

BD SIGNPOST

Zombie MPs have been jolted back to life

- Butler teaches public policy at the University of Cape Town.

What on earth has happened to ANC MPs? Two decades ago, the party’s legislator­s helped forge SA’s new Constituti­on and overhauled a vast swathe of apartheid-era legislatio­n.

Soon after these triumphs, however, many of the governing party’s MPs moved into a dormant or even vegetative state. Party whips and the caucus code of conduct damped any enthusiasm they might have felt for parliament­ary oversight.

Any committee chairman showing abnormal signs of intellectu­al activity was quickly appointed a deputy minister. The quality of ANC MPs steadily declined as the legislatur­e became a retirement home for divisive provincial politician­s.

Even the arrival of the noisy EFF in 2014 did not rouse most ANC members from their slumbers. But almost all parliament­ary zombies have now been jolted into life by the shock of Cyril Ramaphosa’s elevation to the presidency.

Every day now, a torrent of statements pours out of the parliament­ary media office. Earlier this week, the portfolio committees on police and on justice and correction­al services castigated ministers and former ministers for “inadequate responses” to questions about the prosecutio­n of alleged statecaptu­re malefactor­s.

The portfolio committee on social developmen­t also hauled South African Social Security Agency directors over the coals for inadequate audit processes. The portfolio committee on public enterprise­s said it was “not happy or impressed” by how former Eskom board chairman Ben Ngubane had responded to its questions.

There are four possible explanatio­ns for the extraordin­ary revitalisa­tion of once lethargic committee members and chairmen.

First, we may have arrived at a genuine watershed moment with regard to the moral character of SA’s political elites. MPs may have been shocked by how close the country came to full-scale state capture. Recognisin­g how little they did to avert such a disastrous situation, ANC MPs are now driven by a redoubled personal determinat­ion to serve the people and by a deeper than ever moral rectitude.

Second, the ANC still lies in a post-conference interregnu­m. Since Ramaphosa has yet to secure an electoral mandate, party activists are now free to “follow their conscience”, although sceptics may feel that many MPs may not know what this entity is or where to find it. Third, the reanimatio­n of zombie MPs may have been initiated by paranormal clairvoyan­ce about their presence on or absence from future candidate lists. After the Polokwane conference in 2007, when Jacob Zuma became ANC president, even doddery ANC parliament­arians staggered to their feet to lambast Thabo Mbeki’s loyalist ministers — often in the hope of future rewards from Zuma. Today, a Ramaphosa-controlled list process for the 2019 elections is again concentrat­ing MPs’ minds.

Finally, ANC MPs may have been recruited to perform walkon roles in the most ambitious theatrical performanc­es yet conceived in post-apartheid SA. Given that state capture and parastatal looting were instigated and realised by multitudes of ANC politician­s and their allies, these numerous malfeasant­s simply cannot all be punished without putting much of the party behind bars.

For this reason, a spectacula­r drama of parliament­ary interrogat­ion, castigatio­n and humiliatio­n is required to avert the need for a comprehens­ive (and also bourgeois-liberal) programme of prosecutio­n and punishment.

Such a drama will smooth the way for a more thorough and legalistic covering of the tracks, one that can be accomplish­ed only by a presidenti­al commission of selective inquiry into state capture.

 ??  ?? ANTHONY BUTLER
ANTHONY BUTLER

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