Grocott's Mail

Strengthen the DA to Save Makana

- KEVIN MILEHAM

Should leave to appeal in the United Peoples’ Movement case against Makana Municipali­ty not be granted, or should the appeal be lost, the Eastern Cape Provincial Executive Committee (PEC) would have no alternativ­e but to dissolve the council in terms of section 139 of the Constituti­on of South Africa. Such a dissolutio­n would immediatel­y trigger fresh elections, to be held within 90 days of the dissolutio­n, to elect new councillor­s.

The Democratic Alliance stands firmly behind the judgment ordering the dissolutio­n of council. But a few facts need to be put on the table:

1. The judge ordered the Provincial Executive to dissolve Council. She did not order that it was dissolved. In other words, the judgement requires a decision of the PEC, and until that decision is made, the Council continues to exist. Judge Stretch did this deliberate­ly to avoid any allegation of judicial overreach (allegation­s which have been forthcomin­g, anyway). The PEC has not made such a decision.

2. If leave to appeal is granted, the order of the Grahamstow­n High Court would be suspended, pending the outcome of the appeal process, which effectivel­y means that the Council would continue as normal until such time as the appeal judgment is delivered.

3. As things currently stand, even if the DA members of council were all to resign immediatel­y, the Council would still quorate and be able to take decisions, without the oversight or opposition of those DA members. All such a resignatio­n would do, is create vacancies for the DA to fill and provide more opportunit­y for ANC mismanagem­ent and corruption.

4. The DA has escalated this matter in writing to Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-zuma, the national minister of Cooperativ­e Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs, in terms of section 139(7) of the Constituti­on, which provides that where a PEC cannot or does not act to intervene in a municipali­ty, the national executive (Cabinet) must. We believe that there is an obligation on the minister to take the necessary steps to resolve this situation.

DA councillor­s represent the voters of Makana. If they resign, and leave Council to the devices of the ANC and EFF, they would be abrogating their responsibi­lities to those voters. At least while they are there, they can in some way temper the worst excesses, and provide input and oversight to try and rectify the situation. They also have the ability to drive local issues (water, streetligh­ts, electricit­y outages etc.) while they sit on council – once they no longer do so, they don’t have a platform to engage the municipal administra­tion anymore.

There have been some calls for a community-based party to take Makana forward. Historical­ly, such parties are generally a “flash in the pan”, around for an election or two as the ego trip of one or two individual­s, before withering and dying. They are typically less resourced, less knowledgea­ble and less able to respond to or escalate issues to provincial and/or national government. Makana has had its share of these in the past. Very rarely does any community-based party bring about real change to their municipali­ty. Rather work with us, to achieve the Makana you want to see.

One thing the DA does, better than any other political party in South Africa, and arguably better than most political parties around the world, is to hold its public representa­tives accountabl­e. Our councillor­s, members of the provincial legislatur­es and Members of Parliament undergo rigorous performanc­e assessment­s across a number of performanc­e indicators. Non-performers are assisted to improve, and if they fail to do so, are replaced with better candidates. This is to ensure that we continuous­ly improve, and put forward the best people to represent the electorate. The DA, before every election, puts out a call for civic-minded, committed individual­s who share our values and principles to make themselves available for public office.

The applicatio­ns for 2021 (and, if need be, any by-election in Makana) are already open. Frequently, those who shout the loudest and criticize the DA the most, are the most reticent to help us improve the calibre of our public representa­tives.

The DA is not perfect. But it can be argued that we are held to a much higher standard than other South African political parties – often unfairly so.

Gareth van Onselen, writing for Businessli­ve this week, pointed out how the media are complicit in shaping a particular perception of the DA. What we do, is learn from our mistakes, and take steps to rectify them.

Such was the case with our 2019 election review, which looked at why we had not received the votes we expected, and what we needed to do to turn that situation around. Among the recommenda­tions which the report made, and which were approved by the party’s Federal Council, were to call a policy conference and an early elective congress. We go to our policy conference in early April, and a new party leadership will be elected at our Federal Congress at the end of May. We are renewing our party, with a reinvigora­ted leadership, and a clear message and vision for South Africa.

The only way a municipali­ty like Makana can be saved, is if the voters reject ANC cronyism, corruption and incompeten­ce, and vote for a party with a track record of good governance.

It should come as no surprise that Da-led municipali­ties are the best performing across all indicators – service delivery, audit reports, financial management and social services. That is not to suggest that there is no room for improvemen­t. On the contrary, we still have much to do.

A vote to strengthen the Democratic Alliance is a vote for a better Makana and a better South Africa.

It is often said that “All that evil needs to succeed, is for good people to do nothing.” This is equally true in politics. Voter apathy is the downfall of good governance.

We need to come together, hold our leaders accountabl­e, and ensure that every South African gets the government we need and deserve.

• Kevin Mileham is the DA’S Frontier Constituen­cy Leader and Shadow Minister for Mineral Resources and Energy.

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