Cape Argus

Madikizela says he was not pressured to resign

- MWANGI GITHAHU mwangi.githahu@inl.co.za

The decision to step down was his alone, and we respect his decision and the fact that he has chosen to take the honourable route JACO LONDT

DA Chairperso­n

FORMER Transport and Public Works MEC Bonginkosi Madikizela said he was not pressured to resign his party post, but decided to quit out of a sense of honour.

Yesterday, Madikizela confirmed DA provincial chairperso­n Jaco Londt’s statement that his resignatio­n as DA provincial leader was not a result of pressure from any quarter.

About whether there had been an option for the party not to accept Madikizela’s resignatio­n and come up with a different solution, Londt said: “The decision to step down was his alone, and we respect his decision and the fact that he has chosen to take the honourable route.”

As to whether the resignatio­ns of Madikizela and Health MEC Nomafrench Mbombo as the DA’s Women’s Network national leader would hurt the party’s chances in the forthcomin­g local government elections, Londt said: “Political parties are measured on their performanc­e in government and whether they can take up their mandate to deliver services to the people of South Africa.

“The evidence overwhelmi­ngly shows that where the DA governs, it governs with distinctio­n. Out of all municipali­ties in the country, the top five municipali­ties are all within the Western Cape and are run by DA government­s. And this is what we offer to voters.”

Commenting on the possibilit­y of more resignatio­ns from the DA, political analyst Ralph Mathekga said: “Losing two senior members, Madikizela and Mbombo, shows the DA is undergoing difficult circumstan­ces.

“I think it’s possible that they might have more resignatio­ns. Remember, the last time they had this sort of thing was after Herman Mashaba left, and since then they’ve lost quite a few senior members. It’s quite a concern.”

Political science lecturer Shingai Mutizwa-Mangiza said: “It doesn’t help that the public perception and the growing narrative is that the DA is not accommodat­ing to people of colour and that any transgress­ion by people of colour results in severe disciplina­ry action. Just look at the party’s recent history with people like Patricia de Lille, Mmusi Maimane and Herman Mashaba.

“In addition, from a policy perspectiv­e, there’s the fact that going into the 2019 election, when they had their policy conference, they dropped their BEE policy and inserted a new clause focusing on inequality is unhelpful.”

A former DA member and now leader in the legislatur­e of the minority Freedom Front Plus, Peter Marais, said: “The DA has an identity crisis. The exodus of prominent black leaders from the DA continues with the resignatio­n of Bonginkosi Madikizela as provincial party leader and Health MEC Nomafrench Mbombo as chair of the DA’s Women’s Network.

“The question that should be asked is, why did the DA not simply ask Madikizela to apologise and withdraw his resignatio­n as their Western Cape leader and MEC? Does the DA hope a black exodus will see a return of whites to their party? If so, those are false hopes.”

 ??  ?? Health MEC Nomafrench Mbombo
Health MEC Nomafrench Mbombo
 ??  ?? Bonginkosi Madikizela
Bonginkosi Madikizela

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