Sunday World (South Africa)

Local coalition government­s an utter disaster

-

It has become difficult to put any degree of hope and trust in any of the local coalition government­s in light of the widespread chaos that have become synonymous with multi-party governance in most cities across the country.

So dire and untenable has the local government situation become, the electorate no longer knows where to turn to and might be wondering if this is really what the promise of better service delivery means in practical terms.

Listening to Dada Morero’s remarks after he was elected unopposed (following the DA’S walk-out) on Friday to serve as executive mayor of Johannesbu­rg, many citizens in the city would correctly want to know why his promise to “develop and grow Johannesbu­rg to a world-class African city that it once was” should be taken seriously this time around.

Ordinary people have become accustomed to rhetorical platitudes, repeated by politician­s across the political spectrum when they seek the endorsemen­t of citizens, who receive no dividends for the vote they entrusted to political parties.

Morero’s comrade, who is also the governing party’s national spokespers­on, Pule Mabe, could also not resist sloganeeri­ng as he immediatel­y promised that they (the ANC) “are taking [the] city to glory days”. Whatever that might mean, we wish Mabe had tried to adequately spell it out to residents.

But this is the attitude South Africans have come to expect – platitudes that are not matched by action.

When the ANC surrendere­d power to the Da-led minority coalition government in 2016, Johannesbu­rg had by then turned into a pigsty, riddled with corruption and lack of developmen­t.

Apart from not having secured victory at the polls, the Da-led minority coalition – just like the one we saw dramatical­ly collapse this week – did not stand the test of time. It was also based on political expediency rather than shared principles of governance.

Perhaps the point to be made is that while coalition government­s work in other matured jurisdicti­ons such as Germany, South Africa has utterly failed in that regard. The ingrained culture of political expediency is making such arrangemen­ts susceptibl­e to political machinatio­ns.

The question is if democratic principles are to be strictly adhered to, why would a political party such as COPE, which received a minuscule 0.25% of votes (with only one council representa­tive) at the 2021 municipali­ty polls, be rewarded so handsomely with a position of council speaker? Could this be attributed to political shenanigan­s, or could there be another cogent explanatio­n to rule out the question of behind-the-scenes chicanery?

We should also ask in what form does the idea of minority-led coalitions serve the will of the people?

These arrangemen­ts are susceptibl­e to being easily torpedoed by the party that happens to have received the most votes, although having failed to garner an outright majority.

Legislator­s must perhaps start looking into election re-runs rather than impose those marriages of political convenienc­e, which have brought chaos and instabilit­y at local governance level.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa