Talk of the Town

Coalition government­s are here to stay. Here are proposals for making them work better

- JOEL BREGMAN — Joel Bregman is senior researcher at My Vote Counts.This article is republishe­d from GroundUp (groundup.org.za).

Much of the conversati­on about coalitions has focused on the municipal level.

However, the upcoming 2024 general elections, in which the ANC is expected to fall below 50% of the vote, raises the prospect of coalition government­s at the provincial, perhaps even national, level.

At local level, in August 2023, the South African Local Government Associatio­n (SALGA) found that 32 of the 82 municipali­ties that had coalition government­s, including major metros, were not functionin­g well.

The most controvers­ial and far-reaching proposal under considerat­ion is to introduce electoral thresholds for a party to win a seat in a council or legislatur­e. At the national and provincial level, the threshold being touted by the ANC and the DA is 1% of the vote to secure representa­tion.

If there had been a 1% threshold for the 2019 elections, instead of the 14 parties we currently have in parliament, there would only be five.

The DA has indicated it will propose legislatio­n for thresholds for local government, provincial and national government. The ANC supports this.

Deputy minister of cooperativ­e governance & traditiona­l affairs Parks Tau indicated in August that his department was drafting legislatio­n that included thresholds.

Smaller parties are vehemently opposed to this idea, because it will lead to fewer parties in councils and legislatur­es and the larger parties consolidat­ing their power.

Another proposal is to limit motions of no confidence that lead to the removal of a mayor, deputy mayor, or at provincial level the removal of the premier and the executive, or nationally, the president, deputy president and cabinet.

In October, the DA published a Local Government: Municipal Structures Amendment Bill to limit motions of no confidence. The party is also seeking to amend the constituti­on to limit motions of no confidence at national and provincial level.

There are two further proposals, not related to any specific sphere of government and suggested by various groups: the introducti­on of an independen­t body to mediate disputes between coalition partners, and to have coalition agreements published before elections.

With regard to municipal government, the Local Government Municipal Structures Act provides for different types of local councils. Most local councils have either an executive mayor system or an executive committee system.

Under the executive mayor system, all members of the council elect a mayor, who then appoints their mayoral committee. This means that when a mayor leaves office, for example when a coalition breaks down, the mayoral committee must also leave. This can create political instabilit­y, even chaos in the governance of the municipali­ty.

Under the executive committee system, the mayor is still elected by the full council, but the council elects the mayoral committee. When a mayor is removed, the executive committee remains in place.

In December 2022, the Eastern Cape MEC for local government announced a change in the law to move the Nelson Mandela Bay Metro from mayoral executive to executive committee system.

Another proposal aimed at local level coalitions is to extend the time for a government to be formed following an election. At present this is 14 days after the results are declared. The DA has proposed legislatio­n to make this 30 days, as it is at provincial and national level.

Stability is not the only issue; coalitions need to be transparen­t and accountabl­e.

But laws alone will not be sufficient to create the environmen­t for coalitions to best serve constituen­ts. We will need to see a shift in political culture, with power-sharing arrangemen­ts premised on shared principles, rather than efforts to secure power.

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