The Independent on Saturday

Implicatio­ns of president’s decision

- PROF DIRK KOTZE Department of Political Sciences at Unisa

THE Western Cape High Court’s latest judgment on the public protector is widely accepted as a victory for her over President Cyril Ramaphosa. It declared his suspension of her as unlawful, reportedly because it could be understood as a retaliatio­n against her decision to investigat­e the Phala Phala incident.

The president’s right to suspend a public protector, auditor-general or a member of any of the Chapter 9 institutio­ns is stated in the Constituti­on’s section 194(3)(a). “The president may suspend a person from office at any time after the start of the proceeding­s of a committee of the National Assembly for the removal of that person”. That cannot be unlawful and therefore the president does have the right to suspend the public protector.

The motive of Ramaphosa’s decision and its timing appears to be the main contention in the judgment. The three Western Cape judges reached the conclusion that Ramaphosa was biased in his decision.

The public protector also accused him of being “conflicted” or that he was disqualifi­ed to suspend her by a conflict of interest between his decision of suspending her, and her decision to investigat­e a number of accusation­s against him, including Phala Phala.

The court judgment was, however, not in all instances in favour of the public protector. Her claims that he committed acts of contempt of court were rejected. She failed to prove that the timing of her suspension could frustrate the future implementa­tion of a favourable court order.

Ramaphosa’s decision to suspend her before the court pronounced on her applicatio­n for an interdict against it, was also not contempt of court. All that was left, therefore, was his alleged conflict of interest or a biased intention.

The Western Cape judgment has no final word on this matter. The Constituti­on determines in section 172(2)(a) that “an order of constituti­onal invalidity has no force unless it is confirmed by the Constituti­onal Court”. The judgment can therefore not yet be implemente­d. More so, one of the options is that the Constituti­onal Court does not agree with the judgment and sets it aside. Irrespecti­ve of what the outcome is, it will set an important constituti­onal precedent about presidenti­al powers and specifical­ly decision-making.

One of the relevant constituti­onal human rights in this instance is just administra­tive action (section 33). Moreover, the principles of natural justice are closely aligned with it and are always applicable to presidenti­al decisions. The fact that Ramaphosa wrote to the public protector in mid-March (before the Phala Phala furore) to request reasons why he should not suspend her, was an applicatio­n of these principles. It apparently did not persuade the judges in any way. The public impact of this judgment is certainly negative for Ramaphosa. It questions his sense of judgment in situations like this one, it can suggest that his personal interests are more important than his presidenti­al interests, and therefore his credibilit­y is under pressure.

What the judgment did not do is to implicate him in criminal or other misdemeano­urs. The fact that the claims of contempt of court were dismissed serves as a countercon­sideration in the public judgment of his motives.

The Western Cape High Court judgment does not have a direct legal impact on the public protector’s parliament­ary impeachmen­t process. The judgment could not make any pronouncem­ent on this process, because it dealt only with the presidenti­al role in it. Her suspension did not affect any of her rights in the parliament­ary investigat­ion, her ability to present her case to it or her employment as the public protector. The suspension also did not limit or distort any element of the parliament­ary process.

In essence, the case was about a presidenti­al decision and not a parliament­ary one. The fact that section 194 states that such a suspension can happen at “any time” after the parliament­ary process has started, suggests that the process is not affected by a suspension. A person can be suspended in the beginning or right at the end, or not at all, and it should not make any difference. This judgment coincides with the beginning of the ANC’s nomination process for the leadership candidatur­es at the National Conference. It coincides with Dr Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma’s announceme­nt that she is available to be a presidenti­al candidate as well as the latest talks with former president Jacob Zuma, the ANC’s KZN provincial leaders and also other NEC members. The political stakes are therefore increasing all the time, because now until mid-October is the time for the ANC’s branches and provinces to take their decisions about nomination­s.

The latest political dynamics can determine whether Ramaphosa is in a weaker position whether it will encourage his opponents and mobilise new support for them. Dlamini Zuma’s move is most probably a product of this. What it did not do, is to disqualify Ramaphosa as a candidate, both in the public eye as well as by the ANC’s procedures. His most dangerous risk remains the Phala Phala situation.

For him, it is in the first instance about his public credibilit­y, his authority as a president and whether he acts in the public interest or in his own interest. His best hope is that the Constituti­onal Court disagrees with the Western Cape High Court judgment and sets it aside or changes it to a more favourable one. The Constituti­onal Court will also be aware of the criticisms from the Zuma supporters that the court is partisan towards Ramaphosa or in general, politicall­y biased against them.

Their timing of when to announce their own confirmati­on judgment is therefore also complicate­d.

For the moment, an unforeseen possibilit­y is that the parliament­ary impeachmen­t process is concluded before the court’s confirmati­on judgment. The parliament­ary deadline was set for the end of this month, but that will most probably be extended.

Irrespecti­ve of what the final parliament­ary decision is, it will overtake the impact of this court judgment and provide a final conclusion for the relationsh­ip between the public protector and the president.

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