The Citizen (KZN)

Less power absolutely

Jacob Zuma’s ‘abuse of his presidenti­al powers to pursue his personal agenda’ has led to calls from a number of influentia­l individual­s within and outside of the ANC for these powers to be curtailed. They believe Number One’s sole right to appoint and fir

- Eric Naki – ericn@citizen.co.za

Constituti­on doesn’t have enough checks and balances for a president like this, pundits say.

Jacob Zuma’s abuse of his presidenti­al powers to pursue his personal agenda has led to calls from a number of influentia­l individual­s within and outside the ANC for these powers to be curtailed.

They believe Number One’s right to appoint and fire Cabinet ministers and heads of state institutio­ns is excessive.

Political analyst Dr Somadoda Fikeni said the drafters of the constituti­on never anticipate­d a president would one day be the subject of investigat­ion for wrongdoing.

“When they made this constituti­on, they were considerin­g Nelson Mandela, Oliver Tambo and Walter Sisulu but as time went by, it became clear that the same constituti­on could be abused.”

Fikeni cited the Nkandla saga and state capture as among the issues the president was centrally involved in.

On top of this, Zuma’s appointmen­t of incompeten­t people to key positions showed no logic.

“Instead, factionali­sm and political patronage are always a major considerat­ion in all appointmen­ts, whether in the Cabinet or state institutio­ns,” he said.

United Democratic Movement leader Bantu Holomisa also said this week that the constituti­on was formulated with an ideal president like Mandela in mind and not a “rogue element” like Zuma.

He suggested that parliament’s role must be elevated so that new Cabinet appointmen­ts are vetted by parliament’s ethics committee and the public.

He told Talk 702’s Eusebius McKaiser there was a need to review the power of the president to appoint individual­s in key state department­s and institutio­ns such as the National Prosecutin­g Authority (NPA).

The idea should be to introduce checks and balances in who is appointed.

Holomisa said Zuma could not be trusted with too much power. “When we drew up this constituti­on, we had thought we would always have a person like Mandela as president.

“We had not catered for the day we would have a rogue element sitting in the Union Buildings.”

He said potential Cabinet ministers, heads of state-owned enterprise­s and the head of the NPA should be tested to see if they were suitable for office by the parliament­ary ethics committee.

Another analyst, Professor Susan Booysen, said Zuma had failed to exercise constraint in taking certain decisions.

“There is no recognitio­n on his side that he is on his last leg of his presidency. He acts as if he is the only one.

“At the same time, we should understand that he is a president under siege and this is his survival strategy,” she said.

This year, Zuma fired Pravin Gordhan as finance minister, resulting in the rand’s value dropping and the country being downgraded to junk status by internatio­nal ratings agencies. Before that, he dismissed Gordhan’s predecesso­r, Nhlanhla Nene.

ANC presidenti­al hopeful Mathews Phosa was scathing.

“He is an executive president and has the power. He should take decisive executive decisions. Instead, he vacillates and fails to execute the decisions and actions he is supposed to execute.

“But he can’t decide or act properly because our president is conflicted by the state capture,” Phosa said.

This week ANC presidenti­al candidate Lindiwe Sisulu said Zuma’s powers should be diluted into a party collective.

When we drew up this constituti­on we thought we would always have a person like Mandela as president. We had not catered for the day we would have a rogue element sitting in the Union Buildings. Bantu Holomisa United Democratic Front leader

 ?? Pictures: Gallo Images ?? Mathews Phosa Bantu Holomisa Lindiwe Sisulu
Pictures: Gallo Images Mathews Phosa Bantu Holomisa Lindiwe Sisulu

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