Cape Times

Comics have a field day

- Khaya Koko

FORGET who ANC delegates at the party’s 54th national conference believe should succeed President Jacob Zuma as ANC leader – Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma is the preferred choice for SA comedy.

Veteran comedian Kagiso Lediga believes the country’s most caustic comics would acquire great material for gags during a Dlamini Zuma presidency.

“For comedy, I think Comrade NDZ (Dlamini Zuma) would be the funnier president, because she seems so serious. She just has that look of saying: ‘What the hell are you saying about me’ – like she will moer you with a slap,” Lediga joked, motioning a back-hand slap he believed Dlamini Zuma would supposedly deliver.

Speaking to Independen­t Media yesterday, Lediga enthused at how much fun it was for comedians to make jokes about people who take themselves seriously.

But, Lediga said, Dlamini Zuma’s victory would be a “double-edged” sword, as he believed her sternness could be detrimenta­l to his comedic career.

“She (Dlamini Zuma) is good at stopping things. She stopped people smoking in public with her smoking ban – which was a good thing. But next thing you know, she will stop freedom of speech and people like me will be out of a job,” he quipped.

Dlamini Zuma was a fervent anti-smoking campaigner during her tenure as health minister between 1994 and 1999, leading to the enactment of the Tobacco Products Control Amendment Act in 2000.

Lediga said he was thoroughly enjoying being a media guest.

“It (the conference) feels like a township wedding, but of politics. It’s like a R100 million township wedding, where people vote for their favourite uncle or aunt – depending on where you sit,” he said.

Dlamini Zuma is taking on ANC deputy president Cyril Ramaphosa, who Lediga said would be his choice if he could vote, as the comedian believed it was time to usher in a new brand of corruption.

“I like the uncle (Ramaphosa) a lot because I believe he will bring in a new style of corruption versus the old style that we have had so far.

‘‘You know how corruption works; we have to move it around a bit.

‘‘We can’t stick with the same brand of corruption with the same family – give it to other families.”

Meanwhile – Chester Missing, the puppet “political analyst”, who is controlled by ventriloqu­ist Conrad Koch – has also been spotted around the conference venue, where he has been delivering his unique take on the tense gathering.

Missing tweeted his analysis on ANC Women’s League president Bathabile Dlamini’s take on state capture, writing: “Bathabile Dlamini says forgive state capture like you forgave apartheid.

‘‘So if anyone asks what was apartheid like, would Bathabile Dlamini say: like getting an Eskom tender?”

 ?? Picture: Nhlanhla Phillips/African News Agency/ ANA ?? LAST SPEECH: Outgoing ANC president Jacob Zuma delivered his political address at the beginning of the party’s elective conference this weekend.
Picture: Nhlanhla Phillips/African News Agency/ ANA LAST SPEECH: Outgoing ANC president Jacob Zuma delivered his political address at the beginning of the party’s elective conference this weekend.

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