The Citizen (Gauteng)

Pro-poor budget passes

CITY OF TSHWANE: MAYOR MSIMANGA NOT WORRIED BY ANC’S REJECTION

- Rorisang Kgosana rorisangk@citizen.co.za

DA, EFF and other parties in council approve R4bn expenditur­e for 2018-19.

The ANC’s rejection of Tshwane executive mayor Solly Msimanga’s latest budget is a clear indication the party is against service delivery in the townships they are running, according to the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) in Tshwane.

The Tshwane ANC caucus yesterday refused to vote for the proposed budget for the 2018-19 financial year which was debated before council yesterday, accusing the DA mayor of neglecting poor township residents.

But EFF leader in council, Benjamin Disoloane, welcomed Msimanga’s “pro-poor budget”, which was compiled to benefit the majority of the regions that were previously run by the ANC.

“If you analyse the budget, it caters to the townships around Tshwane, but the ANC rejects it since they have a problem of analysing and reading,” Disoloane said.

“The ANC wants the issues of service delivery to be addressed. How can they now reject the budget when they’re councillor­s of those areas? Residents don’t have to worry any more because the EFF is in council to make sure that all executives are held accountabl­e for all promises.

Despite the negative vote by ANC councillor­s, the R4 billion budget was passed after 121 councillor­s from other parties voted in favour of the pro-poor expenditur­e.

While the mayor had allocated the biggest slice of the budget to major infrastruc­ture investment­s such as water and sanitation, roads and storm water, housing and electricit­y, ANC caucus leader Mapiti Matsena dismissed it as one that favours the suburbs.

“We were hoping to see an increase in the maintenanc­e budget, particular­ly in townships,” he said. “We expected the budget to have more in terms of the new capital projects, such as roads. In terms of maintenanc­e, there is no strategy on how the city will deal with the electricit­y outages. This budget is not a propoor budget and people will suffer more under the DA’s budget.”

But Msimanga was not fazed by the ANC’s rejection since the “fresh mandate” was for the “greater good of the people”.

“There are a number of things that I don’t think should have prevented the ANC from voting with council,” he said. “We can have political difference­s but it can’t be at the cost of residents. When parties come to me and disagree with me, I feel as long as the disagreeme­nt is for the betterment of the people, then we can have a discussion. –

Difference­s cannot be at the cost of city residents.

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