The Citizen (KZN)

Litany of broken promises

- Kyle Zeeman

There is a Friday ritual in my house. After an early dinner, the family settles down and watches Netflix.

We always promise to stop watching after one or two episodes so the kids can go to bed and we can get some much-needed sleep. It’s a promise we never keep.

Eventually, we give up and resign ourselves to the fact that we are constantly setting ourselves up for failure... and don’t make the promise any more.

There must be a similar resignatio­n sweeping through the corridors of city halls, government buildings, and Luthuli House. How else do you explain the indifferen­ce that many politician­s have just months before the country’s national elections? Promise? What promise? There is an age-old cycle of politics: Speak nicely. Tell a few stories. Have people pay attention. Make a promise. Break the promise. Rinse, repeat.

But the textbook on “how to be a politician” has been thrown out by those in power, who fail to meet one of the most basic requiremen­ts: make a promise.

Electricit­y Minister Kgosientsh­o Ramokgopa told a media briefing this week that load shedding is here to stay for at least the next three years, but made no promises that rolling blackouts would ease off in that time.

Joburg mayor Kabelo Gwamanda was just as slippery a few days later, when he announced that Lilian Ngoyi Street in the city’s CBD would finally be fixed, but he could not promise the repair bill would not be inflated.

The ANC’s response to former president Jacob Zuma’s public affair with the uMkhonto weSizwe (MK) party has been lacklustre at best and has all the signs of a heartbroke­n lover refusing to accept their partner has cheated on them.

Like that lover, the party hoped Zuma would slip out of their lives quietly and they could move on with life. How else do you explain ANC secretary-general Fikile Mbalula simply declaring Zuma had “taken a decision to leave the ANC”?

The ANC has a rulebook, a book of promises to keep, that state you cannot campaign for another party and not be discipline­d by the ANC. In this, the ANC has so far broken its promise by not taking action against Zuma.

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