Sowetan

Fears that Mandela Bay mayoral system could be scrapped

Multiparty coalition vow to fight notice

- By Nomazima Nkosi nkosin@sowetan.co.za

As the DA and its partners celebrate ousting the ANC-led coalition in Nelson Mandela Bay, concerns have been raised about the Eastern Cape government pulling the rug from under their feet and implementi­ng section 12 of the Municipal Structures Act.

Former cooperativ­e governance and traditiona­l affairs MEC in the province Xolile Nqatha introduced a plan to scrap the mayoral executive system and introduce a collective executive that will take powers away from a mayor and allow a new committee to run proceeding­s.

The switch would force the ANC and DA, the two majority parties in the council with 48 seats each, to work together to control the R17.1bn budget municipali­ty.

On Wednesday, Bay mayor Eugene Johnson was removed through a no confidence motion tabled by the ACDP and seconded by the FF+.

The DA’s Retief Odendaal was elected mayor, beating the ANC’s Wandisile Jikeka, who had replaced Johnson as the ANC’s mayoral candidate.

Jikeka was also removed as chief whip of council during yesterday’s meeting that ran until the early hours of the morning. Abantu Integrity Movement (AIM) leader Mkhuseli Jack was elected deputy mayor and the FF+’s Bill Harington replaced Jikeka as council whip.

Council speaker and Northern Alliance (NA) member Gary van Niekerk remains in his position after crossing floors to support the DA-led multiparty coalition government. Speaking to Sowetan, Van Niekerk said it didn’t take much for the DA to convince them to cross floors.

“It didn’t take much convincing because of what the ANC was doing to us. The ANC tried to suffocate us, tried to kill our party. Tried to tarnish us. The coalition is done and the change of government is done. All I’m into is to go out there and rebuild the brand.

“Our concern now is 2024 and rebuilding the city but we’re also concerned now that the ANC has been removed, I think Cogta in the province will definitely go ahead with section 12. But we’re resolute in fighting section 12 and every member of the coalition is in solidarity because we feel we have a lot to contribute to the city,” Van Niekerk said.

The new multiparty coalition is made up of the DA (48), NA (3), FF+ (2), ACDP (2), Defenders of the People (2), AIC (1), AIM (1), PAC (1), UDM (1) and GOOD (1) which have a combined 62 seats out of the 120-seat council.

The rest of the seats are taken up by the ANC, EFF and Patriotic Alliance.

Meanwhile, on Monday Cogta wrote to city manager Noxolo Nqwazi extending the public participat­ion for the section 12 notice by a further 14 days with a cut-off date of October 7.

In a letter seen by Sowetan, Cogta head of department Andile Fani said the extension would be gazetted on Monday September 26.

Another coalition member, who didn’t want to be named, said: “Now that their people have been voted off, we believe the province will go ahead and implement their plans to scrap the current system we have.”

Yesterday, the new government was meeting to discuss which party would get what position. The DA, ACDP, AIC, AIM, FF+ and the PAC had previously signed a coalition agreement, which included positions parties would get. With the inclusion of GOOD, NA and DOP, p Sowetan understand­s the mayoral com mittee would be: PAC – sport, recreation, arts and culture; AIC – public health; UDM – economic developmen­t, tourism and agricultur­e; ACDP – electricit­y and energy; DOP – human settlement­s; GOOD – safety and security; and DA – budget and treasury, corporate services, infrastruc­ture and engineerin­g including roads and transport.

The new mayoral committee will be elected during a special council sitting next week. ■

 ?? /FREDLIN ADRIAAN ?? Retief Odendaal, the new mayor of Nelson Mandela Bay, on his first day in office.
/FREDLIN ADRIAAN Retief Odendaal, the new mayor of Nelson Mandela Bay, on his first day in office.

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