The Star Early Edition

An overhaul is what’s really needed

-

More cartoons online at MASHUPYE HERBERT MASERUMULE

SOUTH Africa is in a tryst with tumultuous times as coalitions take shape to unlock hung municipali­ties after the local government elections. The implicatio­ns for local government and the administra­tion of municipali­ties are enormous. This is because most are largely politicise­d after 20 years of uninterrup­ted rule by one party, the ANC.

An additional reason is that municipali­ties are not simply administra­tive outposts of the national and provincial government­s. They are also required to play a developmen­tal role. To do this the constituti­on stipulates that they “must structure and manage (their) administra­tion and budgeting and planning processes to give priority to the basic needs of the community and to promote the social and economic developmen­t of the community”.

Can the coalition arrangemen­ts of hung municipali­ties, which largely spawned minority government­s, live up to this? Do they portend the possibilit­y of a non-partisan administra­tion of municipal affairs?

These questions are important because institutio­n-building and consolidat­ion of state capacity for the developmen­t require a profession­al bureaucrac­y.

The issue has not been adequately considered amid all the talk about the political implicatio­ns of coalition-building in hung municipali­ties.

The situation that’s emerged is new for the country. But it is by no means unique.

Nearly two thirds of the countries that make up the EU are run by coalition government­s. In most of them they have been part of the political system for a long time, with the exceptions of Britain, Spain and Greece. How each have fared differs. But a dominant lesson is that to optimise the efficiency of governance, a profession­al and stable bureaucrac­y in the administra­tion of the state is important.

South Africa should take this into considerat­ion as it experiment­s with coalition politics.

A research report, Patronage Politics Divides Us, by the Mapungubwe Institute for Strategic Reflection, is edifying.

Its analysis shows that the edifice of municipali­ties’ institutio­nal dispositio­n is patronage. Their bureaucrac­ies are staffed largely on a partisan basis, especially in senior management, where tenure in office is linked to an electoral term.

So too are their integrated developmen­t plans, which appear to respond more to partisan politics than community needs.

This delegitimi­ses municipali­ties. This explains why communitie­s have adopted “extra-judicial measures” – such as protests and the destructio­n of public property – to communicat­e their concerns. It also explains, at least in part, the governing ANC’s fate in the elections.

The challenge in formulatin­g a new approach is that no grand coalitions have been formed in councils where the ANC has lost its majority but where no clear winners emerged. The radical EFF dashed this possibilit­y by declining to enter into an alliance with the main opposition DA to constitute councils in hung municipali­ties.

The EFF has, however, said it would vote with parties in coalition arrangemen­ts against the ANC.

The minority government­s require the votes of the parties that are not part of the coalitions in councils, especially in major policy areas such as budgets and developmen­t plans. This is necessary as the margins of the electoral performanc­e, especially among the major political par- ties, are close in the hung municipali­ties, with the ANC relegated to the opposition benches.

Does the outcome of the local government elections mark the beginning of a new era? We hope so.

As opposed to the mediocrity that patronage politics produces, non-partisan administra­tion institutio­nalises meritocrac­y and legitimise­s the government. Is this where South Africa is destined to go? Can municipal officials become true profession­als, with a sense of public service? Not necessaril­y. One possibilit­y is that the new coalitions become arrangemen­ts for the politics of patronage to change hands. This is highly possible if the the DA and EFF’s motive is to work together for the sole purpose of keeping the ANC out of power.

An additional problem is that the ANC’s power in municipali­ties it has governed is consolidat­ed in the bureaucrac­ies. Although it is politicall­y displaced in some, it is still bureaucrat­ically intact. This suggests the possibilit­y of governance paralysis for the new coalition government­s.

Naturally, politician­s fear bureaucrat­s becoming “the power elite”. Because of this, we foresee widespread purging – relatively easy in the South African system where the governance framework is susceptibl­e to partisan manipulati­on.

Given the EFF and DA’s steadfastn­ess to get the ANC out of power, the coalition councils are likely to take advantage of the governance framework to influence staffing choices.

The gusto with which the ANC is pursued is likely to go as far as flushing out those considered ANC loyalists in the administra­tion. Often the risk with this is to lay off those who are efficient and competent. This has happened before and is likely to repeat itself, but perhaps discreetly this time: a case of fighting patronage with patronage.

What compounds the pursuit of an effective system is its governance framework, as prescribed in law, which is vulnerable to politicisa­tion.

Legislativ­e and executive powers are concentrat­ed in the municipal councils. The executive authority is delegated to either an executive mayor or an executive committee, depending on the executive municipal system used.

This is at odds with the principle of separation of powers. Most scholars argue that the arrangemen­t is flawed. It exposes the administra­tion of municipali­ties to partisan politics. The municipal councils are involved in the administra­tion. They appoint senior managers. Their tenure is linked to a five-year term. This institutio­nalises the politicisa­tion of bureaucrac­ies.

The spoils are dispensed to sustain political loyalties and allegiance­s.

Appointmen­ts are also partisan-based below senior management. In the mix is also the partisan-driven planning system linked to a five-year electoral term.

This makes a mockery of the Municipal Systems Act, which stipulates that the planning process should be community-centred and widely inclusive. If developmen­t plans are community-driven, why do they change each time political power changes hands?

What this shows is that the planning system should be delinked from the fiveyear electoral term.

The fate of coalitions depends on a rethink of South Africa’s system of local government. Otherwise tumultuous times await. – www.theconvers­ation.com

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? A NEW ERA? The City of Joburg held its inaugural council meeting on Monday. The fate of coalitions depends on a rethink of our system of local government, say the writers.
A NEW ERA? The City of Joburg held its inaugural council meeting on Monday. The fate of coalitions depends on a rethink of our system of local government, say the writers.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa