Sunday Times

Cosatu’s ultimatum to Ramaphosa

Finance minister Mboweni ‘not acting like an ANC deployee’

- By QAANITAH HUNTER

● Trade union federation Cosatu has threatened to break ranks with President Cyril Ramaphosa if he does not “rein in” finance minister Tito Mboweni, who it describes as a “loose cannon who shoots from the hip”.

Cosatu leaders and affiliates met in Johannesbu­rg this week for a three-day central executive committee (CEC) meeting at which union leaders lambasted Mboweni as “the greatest threat to Ramaphosa’s presidency”.

They resolved to meet the ANC leadership next week to tell the party’s top brass to whip him into line or face their wrath on the eve of the 2019 general elections.

Cosatu was one of the first ANC-aligned organisati­ons to publicly back Ramaphosa in the run-up to last year’s ANC national conference. The federation and its affiliates campaigned for Ramaphosa to succeed Jacob Zuma. Now Cosatu’s irritation with Mboweni may lead to Ramaphosa losing his staunch- est backers.

At the centre of Cosatu’s fight with Mboweni are his public statements on stateowned entities, what is said to have been his refusal to follow an ANC mandate, and his supposed “anti-worker” attitude.

Insiders in the Cosatu CEC meeting told the Sunday Times that the meeting heard that Mboweni’s “bravado is really going to cost Ramaphosa”.

“He is going to force us into a battle with the ANC at a time when we have to avoid a battle. He is going to leave us with no options,” an insider said.

The insider said that in the meeting, trade union leaders complained that Mboweni spoke out of turn by saying SAA should be shut down.

The CEC meeting resolved that Mboweni’s comments about cutting the size of the public sector must be rejected.

Further, Mboweni came under attack for his “indifferen­ce to the political consequenc­es” of not intervenin­g in the SABC in time to prevent job losses.

“He doesn’t act like someone who is there as an ANC deployee and Cyril will pay the price,” said a Cosatu leader, who asked not to be named.

Cosatu general secretary Bheki Ntshalints­hali confirmed that the CEC had discussed Mboweni. He said the minister was unable to work within the mandate of the ANC or take instructio­ns from the party.

“We thought that he is almost like a loose cannon. He came when the president made some pronouncem­ent about the economy, including a stimulus package, but he doesn’t speak to those issues. He says whatever he wants to.”

Ntshalints­hali confirmed that the CEC meeting decided to engage with the ANC to get Mboweni to stick to the script.

Cosatu’s sour relationsh­ip with Mboweni dates from his tenure as Reserve Bank governor, from 1999 until 2009. After the 2009 elections and the 2014 elections, Cosatu actively lobbied former president Jacob Zuma not to include Mboweni in his executive.

When Ramaphosa appointed Mboweni finance minister last month after the resignatio­n of Nhlanhla Nene, Cosatu expressed its reservatio­ns but said it understood that Ramaphosa’s back was to the wall and that he had to make the appointmen­t.

Ntshalints­hali said Cosatu hoped Ramaphosa would not keep Mboweni on as finance minister after the elections. “Our view is that Tito doesn’t want to be in the job … for us, we want the ANC to rein him in.”

He said Mboweni’s statements that there was no money to pay public servants was “demoralisi­ng people who are meant to be working hard”.

“Even his statements on the minimum wage … it is legal and binding. No minister of finance can say there is no money for that agreement,” the general secretary said.

“He went uninvited to the US and says there is no future for SAA. He is not speaking to the mandate of the organisati­on that appointed him.”

Mboweni was slammed by the ANC’s national executive committee last month for his remarks that SAA should be closed down, with the ANC saying party deployees in government must stick to party resolution­s.

Mboweni and Ramaphosa did not respond to questions from the Sunday Times.

 ??  ?? Finance minister Tito Mboweni.
Finance minister Tito Mboweni.

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