Sunday World (South Africa)

CR17 ruling inflames hostilitie­s between Maimane, Steenhuise­n

Politician­s trade political blows over Concourt finding

- By George Matlala

Former DA leader Mmusi Maimane and his successor John Steenhuise­n traded political blows in the aftermath of this week’s Constituti­onal Court’s decision that cleared President Cyril Ramaphosa of allegation­s that he had lied to parliament over the R500 000 donation made to his 2017 ANC presidenti­al campaign.

Maimane responded by slamming his successor, saying the official opposition had reduced itself to an extended Ramaphosa faction after Steenhuise­n appeared to be putting the blame for the fiasco squarely on Maimane, who was the one who took Ramaphosa to the public protector Busisiwe Mkhwebane over the donation.

Maimane, who now leads

One South Africa Movement, claimed in an interview with Sunday World that his holding of Ramaphosa to account was one of the reasons he was pushed out of the DA.

The former DA leader was responding to Steenhuise­n’s reaction when he told the SABC that the party was not responsibl­e for decisions made by Maimane and his former chief of staff, Graham Charters. “I personally warned against the matter at the time when I served as chief whip,” Steenhuise­n told the public broadcaste­r. Steenhuise­n’s chief of staff, Ryan Smith, said Maimane had made a “significan­t” error in how he had dealt with the donation matter. “The DA has resigned itself only to the principle of the rule of law.

That cannot be upheld when an incompeten­t public protector is seemingly propped up by, and has the full support of, individual­s such as Mr Maimane,” he added. In turn, Maimane said Steenhuise­n had conceded that the party was an extension of a faction in the ANC. In October 2019, Sunday World reported that part of the reason Maimane was in hot water with his party was because he went for the jugular in getting Ramaphosa to account for the Bosasa donation when he lodged a complaint with Mkhwebane. Some DA leaders had expressed concerns over the prospect of a David Mabuza presidency.

“Well, within the DA that wasn’t always popular when we say we demand accountabi­lity, whether it is Cyril or whoever,” Maimane said on Friday.

“There were some people in the organisati­on who felt uncomforta­ble with that posture because they thought that suddenly we must kowtow to Cyril because they liked him and they believed an old thing that said they will always work with a faction of Cyril in the ANC,” he added.

Maimane and former Johannesbu­rg mayor Herman Mashaba’s exit heralded an exodus of black leaders and a loss of electoral support in black, coloured and Indian communitie­s. The party’s decision to drop race as a determinin­g factor in policy formulatio­n has also been a bone of contention.

The Constituti­onal Court upheld a high court decision to set aside Mkhwebane’s report into the CR17 donation, saying Ramaphosa had not misled parliament.

Smith said the court ruling had nothing to do with Ramaphosa, but “everything to do with the office of the public protector, whose report on the donation was legally flawed and highly irregular”.

“Mmusi Maimane made a significan­t error in welcoming this report when he was party leader. In doing so, he only legitimise­d the public protector and her work when she has been found countless times to have a rudimentar­y understand­ing of the law at best,” he said.

The DA has reduced itself to an extended Ramaphosa faction

Some DA leaders worried over prospect of a Mabuza presidency

 ?? /Gallo Images ?? Mmusi Maimane is accused of having made a huge error.
/Gallo Images Mmusi Maimane is accused of having made a huge error.
 ??  ?? John Steenhuise­n
John Steenhuise­n

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