Mail & Guardian

ANC, DA discuss trading Scopa positions

- Lester Kiewit

The Democratic Alliance has said it’s up to the ANC in the National Assembly to decide who it appoints as chairperso­n of Parliament’s standing committee on public accounts (Scopa).

And, in a surprise move this week, the DA, the governing party in the Western Cape, said it had offered the chairperso­nship of Scopa in the provincial legislatur­e to the ANC.

Both parties, provincial­ly and nationally, have talked about showing more maturity in areas such as co-operation.

“We want to turn a page and move away from an adversaria­l style of opposition politics,” said an ANC insider. “So once we have consulted the provincial leadership, we will likely accept [the DA’S offer].”

But there is more to the DA’S provincial offering. It says it hopes the ANC reciprocat­es the gesture by offering the Scopa chairperso­nship to the official opposition in the National Assembly.

The DA’S chief whip in the provincial legislatur­e, Mireille Wenger, said: “We [the DA] had that discussion and we thought it would be in keeping with democratic practice to offer it to the official opposition [in the provincial legislatur­e]. It would also be in the interest of transparen­cy, accountabi­lity and good co-operative governance.

“So, yes [we’d like them to reciprocat­e],” she added.

The Scopa position in the Western Cape legislatur­e was previously held by the African Christian Democratic Party’s

Ferlon Christians,

who returned to the legislatur­e as his party’s sole representa­tive after the 2019 elections.

Wenger would not comment directly on what the party’s caucus thought of the ability of Christians as Scopa chair: “It’s a new term. So that decision is made by the majority party. We had that discussion and this was the outcome.”

The ANC’S Cameron Dugmore, the leader of opposition in the provincial legislatur­e, said in a statement that the party would “consider any proposal in line with our commitment to being an effective, vigilant, hardworkin­g, responsive and constructi­ve opposition”.

Later, Western Cape ANC spokespers­on Dennis Cruywagen said the party had accepted the DA’S offer.

“We want to turn a page and move away from an adversaria­l style of opposition politics,” Cruywagen said.

“So once we had consulted the provincial leadership, we accepted [the DA’S offer].

For the past 10 years, Themba Godi, of the African People’s Convention, has chaired Scopa at national level, but his party did not secure enough seats to return to Parliament.

The ANC caucus in the National Assembly said it is still finalising the names of parliament­ary committee members and who it will nominate as chairperso­ns.

Scopa is the legislatur­e’s public accounts watchdog, ensuring that public funds are accounted for and that government department­s are held to account if money is misspent.

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