The Citizen (KZN)

De Lille ready to jump ship?

Out of the blue, the DA mayor was paraded by the EFF on social media, hugging Julius Malema and speaking at the party’s service for Winnie Madikizela-Mandela.

- Eric Naki – ericn@citizen.co.za

Cape Town mayor Patricia de Lille’s attendance at yesterday’s EFF memorial service for Winnie Madikizela-Mandela could be seen as her thumbing her nose at the DA and an indication that she is ready to swap the DA’s blue for the EFF’s red.

According to one analyst, her attendance may also expose her to the wrath of the DA’s so-called De Lille Clause, for addressing a commemorat­ion rally organised by a rival party.

Although De Lille addressed the EFF-sponsored memorial service for Madikizela-Mandela in Brandfort, Free State, in her personal capacity, some saw this as an act of defiance against the DA and a sign she might join either the EFF or the ANC towards the 2019 election. However, she refused to respond to what she termed “speculatio­n” about her plans, when asked by The Citizen.

De Lille surprised many when she flew to Brandfort to attend the commemorat­ion as a guest of the EFF. She was billed on the EFF programme as “special colleague mayor”, but the EFF denied that it was recruiting De Lille who, according to speculatio­n, is also being courted by the ANC.

Recently, De Lille was seen at a jazz festival in Cape Town hugging ANC president Cyril Ramaphosa, sparking a frenzy of speculatio­n about her plans if the DA fired her. De Lille has a struggle background and was an MP and senior leader of the PAC before she left the party to establish the Independen­t Democrats, which later merged with the DA.

De Lille is presently facing disciplina­ry action from her party over allegation­s of corruption and bringing the party into disrepute. At the weekend, the DA adopted a recall clause, dubbed the “De Lille Clause”, to enable it to recall its public representa­tives. Many, including De Lille, said the policy was designed to get rid of her.

Political analyst Sanusha Naidu said although De Lille has yet to reveal her intentions if the DA fires her, her attendance at the EFF gathering could land her in trouble with the DA.

Naidu said she was still a DA member until her inquiry was concluded, therefore the party could take exception to her being a guest and addressing a gathering of a rival party, especially considerin­g the EFF’s head-butting with the DA in the Nelson Mandela Bay (NMB) Metro.

The EFF is leading an attempt to remove NMB DA mayor Athol Trollip via a motion of no confidence. The motion has failed to materialis­e twice, due to council meetings being disrupted by the opposition parties.

At the DA congress in Pretoria at the weekend, party federal executive chairperso­n James Selfe said the recall clause would not be applied retrospect­ively or against De Lille. However, he said that this did not preclude anyone from submitting a fresh no-confidence motion against her.

Selfe’s words were interprete­d as meaning the party planned to use the new clause to fire her from the party. In terms of the clause, a member who is asked to resign via no-confidence motion has to resign within 48 hours, failing which his or her party membership is automatica­lly terminated.

Naidu said the DA could approach its lawyers for an interpreta­tion of the recall clause regarding De Lille’s attendance of the EFF-sponsored commemorat­ion and, on the basis of that, charge her again.

Addressing the memorial service, De Lille praised Madikizela-Mandela for being a tough woman and described her as a “flower of the nation” and the “mother of the nation”. “She was so tough, yet so soft, she cried with us,” De Lille said.

She said Madikizela-Mandela made mistakes, but she knew and understood the struggle of the poor and had given everything, even her own life, to the cause.

At the service, EFF national chairperso­n Dali Mpofu made a statement that sparked speculatio­n the party was trying to recruit De Lille. Mpofu said that as she had experience­d being chucked out of parliament (like EFF MPs), she was ready. He chanted in Xhosa that De Lille must return home, come the 2019 election.

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 ??  ?? WARM FEELINGS. EFF leader Julius Malema hugs Patricia de Lille at the EFF’s memorial service for Winnie Madikizela-Mandela yesterday in Brandfort in the Free State.
WARM FEELINGS. EFF leader Julius Malema hugs Patricia de Lille at the EFF’s memorial service for Winnie Madikizela-Mandela yesterday in Brandfort in the Free State.
 ??  ?? WARM WELCOME. The EFF put this photo on Twitter of Patricia de Lille with Bishop Johannes Seoka at the memorial service yesterday.
WARM WELCOME. The EFF put this photo on Twitter of Patricia de Lille with Bishop Johannes Seoka at the memorial service yesterday.
 ??  ?? TEAM WINNIE. On Twitter, EFF says ‘leaders from different parties and organisati­ons come to honour Mama Winnie. Her spirit is a unifying one’.
TEAM WINNIE. On Twitter, EFF says ‘leaders from different parties and organisati­ons come to honour Mama Winnie. Her spirit is a unifying one’.

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