The Citizen (KZN)

More voema for Zuma

The ANC plans to expand the powers of the President’s office to make the country’s Number One even more powerful at all levels, but especially in the matters of the provinces.

- Eric Naki – ericn@citizen.co.za

Big Brother is on the way: the ANC plans to expand the powers of the President’s office, which will see the country’s Number One becoming even more powerful at all levels of government, but especially in provincial affairs.

In the past, President Jacob Zuma was criticised for centralisi­ng the control of all state-owned enterprise­s to his office.

The opposition parties regarded this as another attempt to bring the corrupt “state capture” elements into state entities. There have also been tussles between the ANC-led national government and the DA-run Western Cape on jurisdicti­on in particular areas.

A new ANC discussion paper envisages the establishm­ent of a presidenti­al commission on provinces to review powers and functions of all three spheres of government. But it will zoom in on the provincial roles and responsibi­lities.

However, political analyst Zamikhaya Maseti did not see anything sinister in the ANC proposal. He said the monitoring and evaluation system across government spheres is very important.

“This proposal will indeed ensure that service delivery problems are detected at an early stage and this will surely put an end to the wave of service delivery protests. It’s a good proposal that will enhance service delivery mechanisms”.

The discussion document emanates from the ANC’s national subcommitt­ee on the legislatur­e and governance policy and was released in Johannesbu­rg yesterday by sub-committee chairperso­n and Communicat­ions Minister Ayanda Dlodlo.

The document is part of preparatio­ns for the party’s National Policy Conference, to be held in June at Nasrec, south of Johannesbu­rg.

The policy conference would precede the much anticipate­d national elective conference in December of the ANC.

Dlodlo said that, “given the scale and complexity of government’s delivery across three spheres of government and the state-owned enterprise­s (SOEs), the strategic centre of power in the Presidency must be strengthen­ed to drive the implementa­tion of the NDP, align planning and policy, resource allocation and enforcemen­t”. “The aim here is to improve the alignment and integratio­n of policies and developmen­t across spheres and sectors of government.”

The process would entail modernisin­g the public service.

The capacity of the National Council of Provinces would be enhanced so that it was an active centre of provinces and municipali­ties.

The NCOP is equivalent to the former apartheid-era senate, and it has representa­tives directly from the provinces, while the municipali­ties are represente­d in the body by the South African Local Government Associatio­n.

The aim here is to integrate policies better

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa