Mail & Guardian

‘I lived in a shack,’ says mayor Solly

His history and the state of other African nations spurred the capital’s new first citizen into action

- Athandiwe Saba

Solly Msimanga didn’t like what he saw during his travels to some African countries. “I saw first-hand what liberation movements were turning Africa into. You see the likes of Mozambique with the Mozambique Liberation Front, Frelimo. You see Liberia and what Charles Taylor has done there, Angola and Zimbabwe just next door. Once you see firsthand what happens, you feel you need to do something.”

After one such trip about 10 years ago, Msimanga returned home knowing that he had to do something in South Africa. He didn’t have an appetite for a political party that represente­d only one group or one religion but the Democratic Alliance made some sense to him, Tshwane’s new mayor said this week.

Political shift

In 2006, he attended one of the party’s events because he wanted to hear what it had to say. There was a moment when Tony Leon, then still leader of the party, walked in, gave a brief speech and walked out.

Msimanga didn’t like that. “It felt detached,” he says. “I wrote a letter to the party, not even expecting a response. I told them that they are going about it the wrong way. You can’t land in an area and just deliver a message, and then waltz out.”

A few weeks later, former DA chief executive Ryan Coetzee called him to a meeting in Brakpan. Coetzee was then part of the team putting together a plan for the DA to attract new voters.

Msimanga was soon offered a position in the party’s research unit, where he would have the space to implement his ideas.

“I spoke to my wife after being offered the job. I explained that if I don’t do something now, what kind of a country will I leave for my son, who was a baby at the time, one day?”

He took a “hefty pay cut” from his position at the time, started travelling a lot and had to contend with relatives who didn’t approve of his political shift. His family supported the ANC, for which Msimanga himself had previously voted.

“My uncle is an ANC struggle stal- He worked with the nongovernm­ental organisati­on Project Literacy and held a job at the Liberian embassy at one stage. Later, he joined the United States embassy, which gave him the opportunit­y to travel around the continent.

His personal shift in political ideology happened after one such trip. “When I came back, I assessed my life. I’m working, have a comfortabl­e job and live in a comfortabl­e house, but I questioned whether it was enough. Would I be able to relax and raise my children in this kind of environmen­t where I see things starting to take this negative turn? That’s when I decided to do something.”

After sifting through political ideologies and policies, he says, he opted to join a party he believed could make a difference.

Msimanga becomes less animated, and almost seems shy, when asked about some of the work he does outside politics. He buys school uniforms for children every year and clubs together with friends to buy groceries for the less fortunate over Christmas.

“I am from a poor background and I know what it feels like not to have,” he says.

‘No purge, no deployment’

Although his office is yet to be properly set up, Msimanga is well aware that politics is a complicate­d monster.

A lot of work needs to be done to build a city management team — including hiring a municipal manager because Jason Ngobeni has resigned.

“We will open up the call for applicatio­ns and we will not be deploying anyone,” Msimanga says. This, he adds, means that the best person will get the job, whether they belong to the ANC, the Economic Freedom Fighters or someone not aligned to any party.

“I’m not in the business of purging; our current acting municipal manager was already working here as the deputy. It’s a show of goodwill, and I hope I will be proved right that people are here to do a good job and not to just do a job for a political party.”

 ?? Photo: Delwyn Verasamy ?? Optimistic: Newly elected Tshwane mayor Solly Msimanga says he knows all about hardship because he grew up in the bleak streets of one of Pretoria’s oldest townships.
Photo: Delwyn Verasamy Optimistic: Newly elected Tshwane mayor Solly Msimanga says he knows all about hardship because he grew up in the bleak streets of one of Pretoria’s oldest townships.

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