Mail & Guardian

Parties prepare for SA’S mayoral contests

- Lizeka Tandwa

While the three major parties, the Democratic Alliance (DA), ANC and the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) are expected to wrestle it out for control of the country’s metropolit­ans in this year’s local government elections, independen­t candidates and smaller parties are hoping to make major upsets which could lead to hung metros yet again.

This week, the DA announced its mayoral candidates for five major metros during an elaborate media event in Nelson Mandela Bay.

DA leader John Steenhuise­n announced that it had chosen its former spokespers­on and deputy federal chairperso­n Refiloe Nt’sekhe as its candidate for mayor of the City of Ekurhuleni, while retaining its mayor in the City of Tshwane, Randall Williams, as well as Nqaba Bhanga in Nelson Mandela Bay. Member of parliament and finance spokespers­on Geordin Hill-lewis is the party’s candidate in Cape Town.

Dr Mpho Phalatse, who was a member of the mayoral committee in Herman Mashaba’s Da-led government in Johannesbu­rg, has been chosen as the DA candidate in the country’s economic hub.

Steenhuise­n said the party had a duty to let voters know, well ahead of the elections, who would be tasked with running their cities and towns should it win in those municipali­ties or secure the majority share in a coalition government. He said this would ensure that candidates were interrogat­ed, allowing voters to make an informed choice.

While the EFF and the ANC had not fielded any candidates — true to form — the parties proportion­al representa­tion councillor lists are normally the safest bets in distinguis­hing who will be the next mayor.

In a media briefing on Monday evening, ANC deputy secretary Jessie Duarte told the media that the party had submitted a list of 10 000 candidates to the IEC, with at least half of those as new entries. In Kwazulunat­al’s ethekwini region, the

understand­s that Thabani Nyawose — Ramaphosa’s loyal ally — was number one in its list.

In Tshwane, sources told the that regional chairperso­n Kgosi Maepe had made it to the top of the list while in Nelson Mandela Bay, Babalwa Lobishe — a close ally of premier Oscar Mabuyane and by extension President Cryil Ramaphosa — tops the party list.

On Tuesday IEC chief electoral officer Sy Mamabolo said 10 285 municipal seats will be contested: “There are 276 unique political parties that submitted candidates of which two are contesting in all the 257 municipali­ties in the country. The total number of independen­ts currently captured is 944. In 2016 there were 855 independen­t candidates.”

The EFF and the ANC have indicated they will contest all wards.

EFF leader Julius Malema told the media on Wednesday that the party is open to engagement­s to coalitions but

it would not be binding throughout municipali­ties in the country.

“This time around we are going into a coalition government ourselves as EFF. We think we have amassed the necessary experience and we have men and women who are now capable enough who can lead the successful municipali­ties and that coalition will be based on that,” Malema said, adding that the party was targeting full control of the

ethekwini municipali­ty.

Meanwhile the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) and Actionsa led by former Johannesbu­rg mayor Mashaba are also hoping to chop away support from the major three parties.

The IFP is said to be pulling all of its resources towards taking control of municipali­ties in home province of Kwazulu-natal and maintainin­g its kingmaker status in Johannesbu­rg while Mashaba has set his sights on Tshwane, Ekurhuleni and Johannesbu­rg and hopes to regain his mayoral seat through a coalition.

Actionsa’s mayoral candidate for Tshwane is former DA regional chairperso­n Abel Tau and the Ekurhuleni candidate is former Ekurhuleni official Letlhogono­lo Moseki.

In Cape Town, former DA mayor Patricia de Lille’s Good party hopes to take a chunk of the DA’S vote in coloured communitie­s.

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