Daily Maverick

Motsoeneng: ‘I have mastered the art of politics and am loved’

The disgraced former senior executive at the SABC has designs on running the Free State and becoming an MP – but he has no intention of forming a coalition with other parties to get there. By

- Nonkululek­o Njilo

As the country moves towards the general elections, former SABC chief operating officer Hlaudi Motsoeneng said his African Content Movement (ACM) had snubbed several political parties that had sought to join forces with it in a bid to dethrone the ANC.

They included former president Jacob Zuma’s newly formed umkhonto Wesizwe party and Ace Magashule’s African Congress for Transforma­tion, according to Motsoeneng. The parties had not responded to requests for comment at the time of writing.

Motsoeneng said it was important for him to keep his eyes on the prize as he had intensifie­d his campaign to become the Free State’s next premier, although he also aimed to become an MP in the National Assembly.

“People who want to team up tell me that they do not have a vision for South Africa. I believe we must fight the ANC as individual parties. I don’t believe we should be coming together – next thing there [are] fights for positions,” he said.

Motsoeneng was sacked by the SABC in 2017. Nearly five years after being found guilty of bringing the SABC into disrepute and causing irreparabl­e damage, the cloud still hangs over his head. In his report on the State Capture Commission, Chief Justice Raymond Zondo noted Motsoeneng’s “gross abuse of power” at the SABC and recommende­d that the National Prosecutin­g Authority consider charging him over the public broadcaste­r’s deals with The New Age.

In January last year, the High Court in Johannesbu­rg ordered Motsoeneng to pay back an R11.5-million “success fee” he got from the former SABC board in 2016. He took the matter to the Supreme Court, which also ruled against him.

A year after the decision, Motsoeneng insists he will not pay back the money but will instead exhaust all available legal avenues. “No, I am not going to pay anything,” he confidentl­y said, indicating that not only was he challengin­g the court decision, but he had also taken the public broadcaste­r to court in a bid to claim R22-million from it.

Keeping it local

Speaking to Daily Maverick, Motsoeneng said the decision to venture into politics and launch a political party in 2018, four months before the 2019 national and provincial elections, was so he could keep himself busy.

“I was not really serious, and at the time I did not even understand the art of politics.”

But the ACM did not garner enough support to make it to the National Assembly, winning only 4,841 votes, or 0.03%.

Not all was lost, though. The ACM made some inroads in his local municipali­ty, Maluti-a-phofung, and secured two council seats in the 2021 local government elections. Motsoeneng opted not to take any councillor positions and deployed his members because he believed sitting in council meetings was a waste of time as he wanted total control.

“I want to take decisions and change people’s lives, but just to go there [council] and talk? I will be wasting my time. I want to be

elected so I am in charge and people can hold me accountabl­e for anything that goes wrong,” he said.

Maluti-a-phofung is in the eastern Free State’s Thabo Mofutsanya­na District Municipali­ty. Its principal towns are Harrismith, Phuthaditj­haba and Witsieshoe­k. It has 353,453 residents, of whom 186,144 are registered voters, according to the Census.

It is one of the most dysfunctio­nal councils in the province and is beset by problems, including a lack of service delivery, corruption and councillor­s not attending municipal public accounts committee meetings, where oversight of public funds is conducted.

No party won an outright majority in the 2021 elections. A movement known as MAP16, formed by former ANC councillor­s expelled from the party for speaking against corruption, clinched 20 seats and formed a coalition with parties such as the EFF, the Dikwankwet­la Party of South Africa, the African Transforma­tion Movement, Sarko, Aula and the African Independen­t Congress, leaving the ANC in the opposition benches.

Five years later, Motsoeneng believes his party has grown in the province and he’s

personally “mastered the art of politics”. It is for this reason, coupled with a lack of finances, that he has decided not to contest the elections countrywid­e but only in the Free State and nationally. “I’m contesting the Free State because I believe charity begins at home. I want to make a difference here, to set the standard and then elsewhere.”

With about 45,000 votes needed parliament­ary seat, he is unfazed.

“I am confident that I will get a seat in Parliament because I am loved across SA … people will vote for me. If I had the financial resources, I would contest everywhere again.”

Priorities not policies

for a

Regarding rejecting proposals for partnershi­ps ahead of the elections, he said: “To be honest, I’m not going to partner or go into coalition with anyone until the elections because I believe that people of South Africa deserve better, but they can only get what they want if they vote for me.”

Motsoeneng has no appetite for coalition government­s and believes they are a “recipe for disaster”, despite evidence showing they have worked in other countries.

“South African problems are different than all the countries in the world, so why must we copy what they are doing? I do not believe in being a copycat.”

The ACM has neither a manifesto nor specific policies, but rather has priorities.

“I don’t need a manifesto to run my household,” he said. “All that our people need is water, proper roads... But the first priority for me is employment because I don’t believe people of SA must depend on grants. A few of them can depend on grants like the disabled and elderly.

“For me, it is insulting for South Africans. I get shocked every time President Ramaphosa celebrates that he gives people R350 and they must vote for the ANC. That is really nonsensica­l,” Motsoeneng said.

In the 2021/22 financial year, Auditor-general Tsakani Maluleke identified Maluti-a-phofung as one of the country’s worst-performing municipali­ties. It was issued with a disclaimer audit opinion – the worst a municipali­ty can have.

Maluleke also referred it to the Financial Intelligen­ce Centre for further investigat­ion.

Motsoeneng concurred with the Auditor-general’s findings, adding that among the most pressing issues in the municipali­ty were a lack of service delivery, unemployme­nt, a lack of infrastruc­ture, and load shedding. Asked if he blamed the ANC for the erosion, as it had been in charge of the municipali­ty for more than two decades, he put the blame squarely on the party’s public representa­tives.

“There is nothing wrong with the ANC. The problem is the kind of people they put to lead. The people they deployed at Maluti have really messed up the municipali­ty. It is so painful because all they had to do was maintain what was already there, but instead they are blaming apartheid.

“So I want to make sure that the area where I come from, the area that I know best, I want to start there to change the lives of people, to improve their lives and ensure that there is service delivery,” he said.

With a few months left before the country heads to the polls, Motsoeneng accused the ANC of introducin­g service delivery initiative­s in a bid to woo voters. For this reason, voters ought to punish it dearly, he said.

“The problem again is that the ANC delivers during the elections. The people must really punish the ANC for that.”

I’m not going to partner or go into coalition with anyone ... because I believe that people of South Africa deserve better, but they can only get what they want if they vote for me

 ?? Photo: Thulani Mbele/sowetan/gallo Images ?? Former SABC executive Hlaudi Motsoeneng now leads the African Content Movement.
Photo: Thulani Mbele/sowetan/gallo Images Former SABC executive Hlaudi Motsoeneng now leads the African Content Movement.

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