Cape Times

Phosa slams entire ANC executive

-

EAST LONDON: President Jacob Zuma and all public representa­tives and executive appointees must take joint and collective responsibi­lity not only for the destructio­n of the economy, but also for “raping the poor”, ANC stalwart Mathews Phosa said yesterday.

Delivering the OR Tambo memorial lecture in East London, the veteran ANC member also called for the resignatio­n of the entire cabinet, National Assembly, and ANC national executive committee (NEC).

South Africa was in dire need of dramatic political and economic changes, he said.

“At the very least we need a new political leadership, changes in our economic policy, urgent changes to our education system, and consensus between all stakeholde­rs on how we revive the rainbow spirit in our nation.

“Our national executive and its failed leader is losing court case after court case. Some of the latest examples are the Constituti­onal Court judgment that the president failed to uphold the constituti­on, the judgment that the nuclear energy programme must be summarily halted, and, only last week, that the president should provide reasons for his cabinet changes that proved the direct stimulus for two global rating agencies downgradin­g us to junk,” Phosa said.

Of the three clear constituti­onal centres of power – the executive, legislatur­e, and judiciary – the only one functionin­g was the judiciary.

“Our executive, under the president’s leadership, has long ceased to understand and illustrate that they have a sworn duty to uplift and protect the poorest of the poor. When I use the term executive, or cabinet, I do not exclude a single member, whether he or she is a minister, or deputy minister, or part of the executive presidency.”

Phosa said that in a recent speech he used words to the extent that the president had “raped the economy”. “I stand by those words and want to add today that he and all the public representa­tives and executive appointees must take joint and collective responsibi­lity for not only the destructio­n of the economy, but also for raping the poor. Let me be clear: Not a single member of cabinet has an excuse for jointly authoring the demise of the economy.”

Now, in the ANC elective conference year, some in the presidency and cabinet had belatedly found their voices.

“To those, one single remark: it is not what you say, it is what you do, and have done when all of this was being done, that will define your leadership. The electorate will hold you jointly responsibl­e for the waste of taxpayers’ money,” he said.

“I want to say as little as possible about my party’s (ANC) representa­tives in Parliament. Future generation­s will look at your pronouncem­ents and decisions and find them to border on the treasonous. Let me add that the same future generation­s will hail the Derek Hanekoms and Mcebisi Jonases of this world as heroes. They sacrificed their jobs because of their honesty.

“My proposal to the entire cabinet, the National Assembly, and the ANC NEC would be to resign and allow our voters to choose the leaders they want,” Phosa said.

The massive disconnect between the comfort of public representa­tives and the increasing­ly desolate voters they had to serve had become unbridgeab­le. The past five years had seen the political decision-makers become the “haves” and the electorate the “have nots”.

There would be no debate about “judicial overreach” if Zuma, his cabinet, and the National Assembly took their constituti­onal duties, and responsibi­lity towards the poor seriously.

“For the president to utilise the ‘they hate me’ argument is childish, disingenuo­us, and in bad taste. It is time to go, Mr President. You have failed the voiceless and the most vulnerable. They will, however, find their voices at the ballot box. We are at a juncture in our young liberation where we need leaders who understand that South Africa belongs to all who live in it, as well as that the poor, and not our friends’ already swollen pockets should be our focus,” Phosa said.

 ??  ?? MATHEWS PHOSA
MATHEWS PHOSA

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa