Cape Argus

Fury over ‘DA cadre’ job

- MWANGI GITHAHU mwangi.githahu@inl.co.za Cape Argus,

NEWS of the appointmen­t of former Transport and Public Works MEC Bonginkosi Madikizela as a special adviser to Premier Alan Winde has caused an uproar among members of the provincial opposition.

This despite the fact that the appointmen­t is yet to be finalised as the national Department of Public Service and Administra­tion (DPSA) must first vet the applicatio­n in line with associated regulation­s.

Madikizela left office under a cloud in April last year after it emerged that he had misreprese­nted his qualificat­ions and was found by the public protector to have breached the Executive Ethics Act and Executive Ethics Code after he had lied to the provincial legislatur­e.

Leader of the Opposition, Cameron Dugmore (ANC), urged the DPSA to reject the appointmen­t, calling the move cynical and DA cadre accommodat­ion.

“Madikizela was unfit to hold public office. What can he advise the premier about? How to be deceptive?

“In the premier and the DA’s judgement Madikizela was found not to be good enough to be MEC. But now suddenly the premier finds him suitable to be a special adviser. This is DA patronage at work.”

He said the premier had shown his contempt for ethical values and once again illustrate­d how the DA exercises double standards.

Freedom Front MPL Peter Marais said: “Maybe the DA is short on academical­ly qualified members. Still we must respect the premier’s choice of who should advise him on how to lose the next election in 2024.

“I admit though that educationa­l qualificat­ions are not the only yardstick by which to measure political fitness. But integrity definitely is the true factor.”

GOOD Party secretary-general Brett Herron said: “The announceme­nt of Madikizela’s soft-landing appointmen­t as a special adviser to the premier is a disgracefu­l example of jobs-for-pals, or what the DA calls cadre deployment.

“It exposes the premier’s so-called government of integrity as a sham.”

Meanwhile, in a phone conversati­on with the Madikizela said: “I haven’t been appointed yet, for now you can direct all questions to the premier.”

Winde wants Madikizela as a special adviser following Donald Grant’s retirement from the post in November last year.

Asked what the position entailed, Winde’s spokespers­on Cayla Murray said the premier required advice on important priorities, including on improving public transport.

She said that as a former MEC of Human Settlement­s and Transport and Public Works, Madikizela had the experience and expertise necessary for the post.

“The province is currently undertakin­g a strategic review, to improve its service delivery to communitie­s.

“The premier is specifical­ly looking for an adviser to assist with better engagement between the province and the communitie­s it serves so that the provincial mandate is executed to the benefit of all citizens.”

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