Mail & Guardian

Parties unite to trip up JZ over Sona

Whether it’s through the opposition or the ANC itself, the road to Jacob Zuma’s State of the Nation address is littered with potholes

- Dineo Bendile

Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) leader Julius Malema says his party has asked National Assembly speaker Baleka Mbete to convert next week’s State of the Nation address (Sona) into a debate about a motion of no confidence in President Jacob Zuma.

This comes on the same day that Mbete ruled out the possibilit­y of having a special sitting before the address to debate such a motion (‘Orderly’ speech to go ahead).

Speaking to the Mail & Guardian on Thursday, Malema described Zuma as a highly compromise­d leader who does not have the interests of the country at heart.

“Everybody agrees now that the guy must go. There is a huge political developmen­t in the sense that he is no longer the president of the ruling party. If we love this country and respect the people of this country, you cannot without any justificat­ion say this guy must continue to give them the State of the Nation. He has got no respect for our people,” said Malema.

He said if the ANC was serious about fighting corruption, it would ensure Zuma did not deliver the address on February 8.

“If the [new] ANC [leadership] has a new attitude and a new heart, someone [in the national executive committee] should be saying we should have a dignified State of the Nation this time around. [Demonstrat­e] that the change we have been speaking about starts now. We must give the nation some hope,” said Malema.

His statements come after opposition parties vowed to form a united front to ensure Zuma does not deliver the Sona, following developmen­ts such as the Constituti­onal Court’s impeachmen­t ruling and the establishm­ent of a judicial commission of inquiry into state capture, in which Zuma is implicated.

In a letter to Mbete, Malema threatened to disrupt Sona proceeding­s should Zuma be allowed to deliver the address without first facing a motion of no confidence.

“The suitabilit­y of Mr Jacob Zuma to continue in the office of the presi- dent is more of an urgent question now than a Sona to be delivered by an incumbent who is on the verge of commission­s and trials.

“We therefore write to the speaker to request that she must start a process of rescheduli­ng Parliament’s programme if Mr Zuma is still president. Failure to do so will leave us with no option but to take up the issue during Sona.”

The EFF has been joined in its efforts by the Democratic Alliance, which has also asked for Sona to be suspended until Zuma is removed, either through a motion of no confidence or a recall by the ANC.

Mbete had indicated that she would consider both requests and on Thursday announced her decision to turn them down.

“The answer is no, we are not going to have a special sitting before the joint sitting to receive the Sona address.”

The moves have galvanised United Democratic Front (UDM) leader Bantu Holomisa to rally all opposition parties to ensure that Zuma does not deliver the address.

This week, Holomisa told the M&G he had gathered the support of the EFF, the DA, the Congress of the People and the African Christian Democratic Party for a meeting on Friday where they would “compare notes and reach a common position [on Zuma]” before joining Mbete for a party leaders’ meeting on Tuesday.

The meeting was due to be held this week but Holomisa believed it had been intentiona­lly postponed to frustrate the EFF’s attempts to debate a motion of no confidence before February 8.

“Baleka called us to propose a meeting for today [Wednesday] and then, out of the blue, she postponed it,” Holomisa said. He accused her of delaying tactics.

Although ANC insiders have told the M&G that the party’s national working committee has called for Zuma to be removed before the Sona is delivered, Holomisa said he was not confident that the party would be able to achieve this because ANC leaders were still contradict­ing each other on the matter.

“The sooner they [the ANC] get their act together, the better for them and the country. But let’s be clear that opposition parties have been in the vanguard in this campaign for Zuma to go, and we won’t stop until he does. So, if Cyril Ramaphosa and his team are pussyfooti­ng, then it’s their problem,” Holomisa said.

This is not the first time that opposition parties have worked together to try to secure Zuma’s removal.

Last year the UDM, supported by other opposition parties, asked the Constituti­onal Court to force Mbete to grant a secret ballot in a motion of no confidence against Zuma. The secret ballot saw at least 25 ANC MPs voting in favour of the motion.

In his letter to Mbete, Malema said he believed that even more ANC MPs would vote with the opposition this time around.

 ??  ?? Testing, testing: If opposition parties get their way, President Zuma won’t be giving the State of the Nation address. Photo: David Harrison
Testing, testing: If opposition parties get their way, President Zuma won’t be giving the State of the Nation address. Photo: David Harrison

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