Daily Maverick

Opposition firm on ‘doing what’s right’ in Parliament

MPs fought for a physical meeting and manual roll call in vote on Phala Phala report. By

- Marianne Merten

MPs will vote on Tuesday, 13 December on the Section 89 independen­t panel recommenda­tion that President Cyril Ramaphosa has a case to answer for possible impeachmen­t over serious violations of the Constituti­on.

It was a late-night special sitting of the programmin­g committee on Monday that endorsed the one-week delay after days of political and constituti­onal drama – and just hours after Ramaphosa filed his court papers challengin­g the recommenda­tion and the ANC National Executive Committee (NEC) made a decision to vote it down in the House.

Moving the parliament­ary debate and vote to 13 December seemed the trade-off for the opposition’s calls for a physical meeting with a manual roll call vote during which every MP’s decision is recorded.

The call for a roll call process came from the DA in a move to hold individual MPs accountabl­e. The call for a physical sitting came from the EFF for similar reasons.

While Speaker Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula on Monday indicated she had been disincline­d to approve either of the calls, the special National Assembly programmin­g committee took a different turn.

Parliament, as a multiparty institutio­n of elected public representa­tives, was autonomous and needed to conduct its business properly, opposition MPs emphasised.

The proposal that was ultimately unanimousl­y accepted came from ANC Deputy Chief whip Doris Dlakude, after EFF Chief Whip Floyd Shivambu’s earlier suggestion of moving the vote to either this past Thursday or next Tuesday.

DA Chief Whip Siviwe Gwarube had argued that even in a hybrid system, MPs needed to be able to record their votes.

“The argument that it takes long is neither here nor there. The gravity of the situation should not deter Parliament from doing what is right,” said Gwarube.

The last time this happened, in March during a no-confidence motion, the ANC had hosted many of its MPs at the Cape Sun. Predictabl­y, the motion was defeated, even if the ANC “frogmarchi­ng” its MPs into one venue to ensure voting discipline emerged again in Monday night’s discussion­s.

But much of the one-week delay was all about flight arrangemen­ts and other logistical arrangemen­ts for the physical meeting at a venue yet to be determined.

In some ways, it’s postponing the inevitable, given the NEC’s decision earlier on Monday to “vote against the adoption of the report of the Section 89 panel, given the fact that it is being taken on review”, according to its official statement.

The ANC holds the majority of seats – 230 of the National Assembly’s 400 – and unless at least 31 ANC MPs publicly buck the party line, the Section 89 report will be nixed.

Crucially, the ANC may well get the support of some smaller parties like Good and the African Independen­t Congress, each with two MPs, or the single Al Jama-ah MP. That would mean 37-plus ANC MPs must vote with the opposition to proceed with a presidenti­al impeachmen­t.

Previously, ANC MPs may have talked up their opposition, but when it came down to it they toed the party line, or made sure they were not present.

Voting down the recommenda­tion would be a neat end to the matter, at least in Parliament, if not necessaril­y politicall­y.

Once the House rejects the report and recommenda­tion, the parliament­ary matter ends right there. However, the internal ANC battles at its national elective conference from 16 December would still have to play out. And opposition parties would make hay from the governing party again protecting a president from scrutiny and consequenc­es for at least questionab­le actions all the way to the 2024 elections.

Meanwhile, Ramaphosa’s court papers make it clear he does not believe he’s been given a full hearing. In a direct approach to the Constituti­onal Court, he has asked for the report to be reviewed and set aside.

“It is submitted that the panel had a duty to fulfil its constituti­onal obligation­s by conducting its inquiry lawfully and constituti­onally. Its failure in this regard is the failure of constituti­onal obligation­s,” he says in his founding affidavit.

During the programmin­g committee’s special sitting, this presidenti­al challenge was also raised. Parliament’s chief legal adviser, advocate Zuraya Adhikarie, told MPs that although the same matter was before courts and Parliament, next week’s meeting can still happen. The sub judice rule is not a complete bar, according to previous court judgments.

This effectivel­y put an end to the possibilit­y of kicking for touch, over legalities, the vote in Parliament.

Shivambu described as “nonsensica­l” Ramaphosa’s legal action, which also cites the Speaker.

Right now, Parliament has not yet decided what to do in response to those presidenti­al court papers, according to Mapisa-Nqakula.

“We are studying the papers, and then [will] get other legal opinion. Politicall­y, I do have an appreciati­on that this was a process initiated by Parliament and whatever we do, we have to take that into considerat­ion.”

Mapisa-Nqakula also maintained that Parliament was autonomous and would have to decide the next steps for itself.

The programmin­g committee adjourned at 10.09pm, with one ANC MP overheard saying, “Bring it on next week.”

 ?? ?? The Speaker of the National Assembly, Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula, addresses the media at Parliament. Photo: Brenton Geach
The Speaker of the National Assembly, Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula, addresses the media at Parliament. Photo: Brenton Geach

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