The Citizen (KZN)

Patricia de Lille cuts ties with the DA

According to a source, federal leadership is concerned the party might be punished in 2019 polls.

- Simnikiwe Hlatshanen­i –simnikiweh@citizen.co.za

Yesterday two more DA city councillor­s resigned in support of De Lille.

Outgoing Cape Town mayor Patricia De Lille vacated her office yesterday, but the Democratic Alliance hasn’t seen the last of her as she has filed court papers against the City of Cape Town and the party.

De Lille wants the council’s adoption of a damning report on her conduct to be set aside, contending that law firm Bowmans made contradict­ory findings on the same misconduct charge against her. She also wants the DA to pay the costs of the applicatio­n.

De Lille said the purpose of her court challenge was to clear her name.

“How can the same company conducting the same investigat­ion on the same charge come to two different conclusion­s about me? One conclusion clears me of wrongdoing and the other finds me guilty and therefore needs to be investigat­ed. That’s at the heart of the legal challenge.

“I only agreed to resign after the DA abandoned the Steenhuise­n report due to lack of evidence and withdrew the charges against me.

“I was not prepared to resign with charges hanging over me.”

Yesterday two more DA city councillor­s resigned in support of De Lille.

Echoing the accusation­s of the last five DA councillor­s who quit, namely that the Western Cape’s ruling party pushed a racial agenda and victimised some of its non-white members, councillor Philiswa Marman said she was saddened by the party’s handling of the De Lille matter.

“My reason for resigning is the inherent racism I found in the party. As a black person in the DA, I felt undermined, particular­ly as a portfolio committee chairperso­n in the City of Cape Town.

“During my last constituen­cy meeting, I felt belittled by my constituen­cy head, who kept interrupti­ng me when I was speaking.

“I refuse to be treated like a maid in an organisati­on that preaches freedom and fairness. These are a few examples of the racism I have experience­d.” Councillor Johnathan Cupido penned a longer resignatio­n letter to the same effect. This week, DA federal leader Mmusi Maimane shot down this narrative, claiming some DA members were employing tactics

My reason for resigning is inherent racism in the DA

akin to the ANC and the Economic Freedom Fighters by responding to accusation­s of corruption with claims of racial victimisat­ion.

De Lille tendered her resignatio­n to speaker Dirk Smit yesterday.

She accused him of “singing for his supper” after he stated on Tuesday that he had laid criminal charges against De Lille and DA councillor Brett Herron.

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