Cape Argus

Madikizela to ‘take over’ from De Lille

But Cape mayor not going down without a fight

- Jason Felix

PATRICIA de Lille’s mayorship of Cape Town is hanging by a thread, but she has warned the DA not be too hasty in getting rid of her. After word leaked that the DA’s metro executive has recommende­d that she be sacked, De Lille released a statement that she is aware of plans to replace her with provincial leader Bonginkosi Madikizela.

De Lille has lost the confidence of the DA’s metro executive, under the leadership of Grant Twigg, which has recommende­d to the national leaders that she be sacked as mayor.

“I communicat­ed our recommenda­tions to the party leadership and trust they will act swiftly in the best interests of the organisati­on,” said Twigg.

“All public representa­tives are accountabl­e to their party and voters, and as the party leadership we need to ensure all deployees are acting in the best interests of voters as well as the organisati­on, and not themselves. The metro executive has not taken these decisions lightly, but after careful considerat­ion and deliberati­on.”

De Lille is the subject of two investigat­ions – one in the DA led by party chief whip John Steenhuise­n, and a second one by law firm Bowman Gilfillan which is investigat­ing allegation­s of corruption and maladminis­tration in the City.

Steenhuise­n investigat­ed the political tensions in the Cape Town Caucus and allegation­s involving serious questions of good governance and maladminis­tration.

One of the matters under investigat­ion was the political tension between De Lille and her mayoral committee member for safety, security and social services JP Smith.

In a scathing statement, De Lille said Twigg’s statement is yet another example of the flagrant disregard for process and an attempt to get her out.

De Lille said after Twigg’s statement was released she received numerous calls from DA members who have never been consulted on his statement.

“The regional executive therefore needs to provide the proof of when they met with the branches and what mandate they received from the branches.

“It is only fair that this proof is provided to understand whether the DA members and branches were consulted.

“They can do this by providing a list of the meetings which took place when branches took decisions. It is clear that the regional executive are confused about their role and function,” she said.

Madikizela said he had no ambition of becoming the next mayor.

“It is completely nonsense. I am not taking over as the mayor. I am the Human Settlement­s MEC until the premier fires me from my position. We follow processes in the DA; people apply for positions in the DA. The party’s national structures are dealing with the matter, but we need stability in the City of Cape Town, the sooner, the better. The right decision will be taken,” he said.

Simon Grindod, former national deputy leader of the then-Independen­t Democrats, said the DA was planning to appoint Madikizela as mayor and position Alan Winde, MEC for Economic Opportunit­ies, Tourism and Agricultur­e as candidate for premier in 2019.

“So reliable sources confirm that the De Lille smears are to oust her to create a job for Bonginkosi Madikizela, newly elected DA provincial leader. The DA have earmarked the post-Zille Premiershi­p for Alan Winde. It’s a done deal,” he said.

along with the five judges. As Parliament we must still play a role, we must be able to process all these issues, because at the end of the day, the bus stops with Parliament,” said Khubisa.

United Democratic Movement MP Nqabayomzi Kwankwa urged that before impeachmen­t could be discussed by a panel, or whichever body was instituted, it must first be debated in Parliament.

“An impeachmen­t is a political matter because the President accounts to us. Matters must first be debated in Parliament before they go to the committee or whichever body is instituted for impeachmen­t,” said Kwankwa.

The subcommitt­ee, chaired by Richard Mdakane, agreed that Zuma should be given a chance to make representa­tions to Parliament during the impeachmen­t process. Members also agreed that the voting on impeachmen­t process should be done by secret vote.

The DA’s Natasha Mazzone said this would allow MPs who have taken an oath to avoid toeing party lines.

“It is the same way in which the person was elected into the position; it must thus be the same way they’re removed, by secret ballot. This will be for protecting the speaker and other members,” added Mazzone.

Mdakane encouraged members to come up with options which would be considered next Friday. Members were divided on whether a panel of only judges should be appointed or one with Parliament playing an oversight role. The committee has resolved to present and adopt the rules by the end of next week in order to begin with the impeachmen­t process by March.

‘WE MUST STILL PLAY A ROLE, BECAUSE AT THE END OF THE DAY THE BUS STOPS WITH PARLIAMENT’

 ?? PICTURE: IAN LANDSBERG/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY/ANA ?? IN HAPPIER TIMES: Mayor Patricia de Lille and Bonginkosi Madikizela doing a victory waltz following the DA’s overwhelmi­ng win in the Western Cape. Times have changed.
PICTURE: IAN LANDSBERG/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY/ANA IN HAPPIER TIMES: Mayor Patricia de Lille and Bonginkosi Madikizela doing a victory waltz following the DA’s overwhelmi­ng win in the Western Cape. Times have changed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa