Business Day

Get ready for more coalitions after polls

- Bekezela Phakathi Parliament­ary Writer phakathib@businessli­ve.co.za

DA leader Mmusi Maimane says coalitions will be the order of the day for the foreseeabl­e future and is confident they can succeed, despite recent challenges at municipal level.

DA leader Mmusi Maimane says coalitions will be the order of the day for the foreseeabl­e future and is confident they can succeed, despite recent challenges at municipal level.

“We are now in the era of coalition government­s and for the foreseeabl­e future this will be the case, including in national government,” Maimane said as he delivered his “alternativ­e state of the nation address” in Cape Town on Wednesday.

President Cyril Ramaphosa is due to deliver his state of the nation address in parliament on Thursday.

SA is gearing up for the 2019 national elections, which are likely to take place in May. Some political commentato­rs and pollsters have suggested the elections will bring about the possibilit­y of coalitions, most likely at provincial level.

However, coalitions have proved to be problemati­c in recent times. Following the municipal elections in 2016 several political parties joined forces to elect DA mayors in hung municipali­ties, including Johannesbu­rg, Tshwane, and Nelson Mandela Bay. The collapse of the DA-led coalition rule in Nelson Mandela Bay in 2018 illustrate­d the fragility attached to such coalitions.

Maimane said: “I will be the first to admit that governing in coalitions and in minority government­s in the metros has not been easy. But it is the way forward for us.

“It is possible for such coalition government­s to succeed if they can agree on putting the interests of the people first, and if they have a plan to work from.”

He said the elections had to be a “referendum on the ANC”.

“Not an expression of hope for a better version of the ANC, but a referendum on the party’s achievemen­ts and failures during its time in office, and particular­ly its performanc­e over the past term. Anything less would be a derelictio­n of our duty in our hard-won democracy.”

He said the ANC had brought the country to the edge of the cliff. “They have given us the single biggest threat to our economy: Eskom, with its massive debt of R400bn and counting.

“They have given us almost 10-million unemployed South Africans,” Maimane said.

“They have given us systemic corruption that will take years, if not decades, to eradicate from the state.”

He said the DA blueprint would provide policy certainty. “This will include guaranteei­ng private property rights and guaranteei­ng the independen­ce of the Reserve Bank.

“Compare this with the constant contradict­ions from the ANC on crucial issues like land expropriat­ion, the Reserve Bank and prescribed assets. No investor can make decisions in such a climate,” he said.

“We will make job creation the core focus of everything we do and we will offer special incentives to investors who meet a minimum jobs threshold

… Our full manifesto will deal in detail with this plan to help create jobs, as well as crucial issues such as the management of our state-owned enterprise­s, fiscal stability, economic redress, land reform and social developmen­t,” he said.

“At the heart of this manifesto lies our plan to build the SA we once all thought possible but have since lost sight of.”

WE WILL MAKE JOB CREATION THE CORE FOCUS OF EVERYTHING WE DO AND WE WILL OFFER SPECIAL INCENTIVES TO INVESTORS

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