Daily Dispatch

MPs to be voice of people not party

-

RECENTLY the question has been raised publicly whether ANC members of the National Assembly (ANC MPs) can support a motion of no-confidence in the president of the Republic as proposed by members of the opposition parties (opposition MPs).

This matter has arisen because the president of the Republic, Jacob Zuma, is also president of the ANC.

There are two major elements relevant to this question.

One relates to whether the ANC MPs can vote against their own party president given the normal and standard assumption that members of political parties must respect all decisions adopted legitimate­ly by their parties.

This asserts the principle and establishe­d practice that the ANC MPs are accountabl­e to their party, the ANC, and must therefore, and at all times, act in parliament specifical­ly to implement the decisions of the ANC.

This very same assertion applies equally to all MPs of other parties represente­d in parliament, not only the ANC.

In the current specific instance, the legal ANC leadership has taken the decision that it has full confidence in its president, Jacob Zuma, and naturally expects all ANC MPs to respect this decision.

To the contrary, the equally legal leadership collective­s of the opposition parties have adopted a contrary view, and therefore require their MPs to act according to this view.

On this basis it is logical that the opposition MPs are expected to vote according to the decisions of their parties.

What we have described poses the question all parliament­ary parties must answer – is this what the electorate expects of its elected representa­tives?

The second element relates to a more complex matter which is fundamenta­l to the very character of our country as a constituti­onal democracy.

This has to do with the role of our MPs as defined by our constituti­on.

In this regard it is imperative that all our political parties and our nation as a whole must pay particular attention to the March 31 2016 seminal judgment of the Constituti­onal Court which was occasioned by the Nkandla matter.

In that judgment the Constituti­onal Court went to great lengths to explain the obligation­s our constituti­on places on all organs of state, thanks to the success of the vision adopted by our nation as a consequenc­e of the political victory of the protracted and costly struggle for national liberation.

The millions who made enormous sacrifices to end apartheid domination determined that we must reconstruc­t our country as a constituti­onal democracy and defined this democracy in our 1996 constituti­on.

In this context, consistent with its constituti­onal mandate, among others the Constituti­onal Court explained the place, role and tasks of our MPs, and therefore the national legislatur­e, strictly as defined by our constituti­on.

It stated, correctly, that our MPs serve in parliament as representa­tives of the people!

They do not serve in parliament as representa­tives of political parties, even as they are members of these parties.

All logic confirms that our constituti­on is correct in this regard [and on] which constituti­on must be respected, consistent with what the Constituti­onal Court said correctly that: “This constituti­on is the supreme law of the Republic; law or conduct inconsiste­nt with it is invalid and the obligation­s imposed by it must be fulfilled.”

There is absolutely no MP who sits in parliament by virtue of being elected by the political party to which they might belong, including those who subsequent­ly get elected by parliament to serve as head of state and government.

All MPs of all political parties serve as members of parliament because they are elected by the people of South Africa and are therefore accountabl­e to this electorate – the people of South Africa.

Specifical­ly in this regard, the Constituti­onal Court said: “The National Assembly, and by extension parliament, is the embodiment of the centuries-old dreams and legitimate aspiration­s of all our people. It is the voice of all South Africans, especially the poor, the voiceless and the least remembered.”

Accordingl­y the National Assembly and by extension parliament, is not a conglomera­te of the voices of the political parties represente­d in parliament.

Rather, and of critical importance to the purposes of the constituti­onal democracy establishe­d through a very costly struggle for national liberation, parliament must be the voice of all South Africans.

This represents the constituti­onal expression of the historic demand and vision – the people shall govern!

It is therefore obvious and logical that MPs, each elected to this position by the people as a whole and never by individual political parties – including their own – must act in parliament as the voice of the people, not the voice of the political parties to which they might belong.

Obviously the two elements we have explained of the imperative­s which impinge on how MPs should conduct themselves in parliament presents a conundrum which faces all MPs.

Should the MPs act in parliament, in our constituti­onally-mandated multi-party democracy, which therefore encourages the establishm­ent of various political parties, as representa­tives of their political parties; or...

Should the MPs act in parliament, which is elected on the basis of the constituti­onally-required popular participat­ion through a non-partisan universal franchise, as representa­tives of the people?

Boiled down to its essentials, the question becomes: what will each member of parliament decide regarding the vital questions:

● Do I serve in parliament to promote the interests of my political party;

● Do I serve in parliament to promote the interests of the people; and

● Is it possible that there might be particular circumstan­ces and particular issues when I consider that the interests of the party and those of the people coincide, and what actions should I take in this context?

It may be that the current political controvers­y has, at last, imposed on our country the opportunit­y and obligation to better define the constituti­onal and moral relationsh­ip between the people and their elected representa­tives.

Whom do the elected representa­tives represent?

Thabo Mbeki is the former President of South Africa.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa