Talk of the Town

SA’s constituti­on was set up as the bedrock of its democracy

It’s been challenged over last 30 years, but has held firm

- RICHARD CALLAND Richard Calland is Associate Professor in Public Law, University of Cape Town. This article is republishe­d from theconvers­ation.com

There was a moment during the state capture years of South African president Jacob Zuma’s term in office (2009 to 2018) when the veil finally slipped.

There had been quiet rumblings against the country’s constituti­on for many years. But now a senior figure in the ruling African National Congress its chief whip in the National Assembly, Mathole Motshekga gave public expression to the notion that when judges overturned decisions of the government they were underminin­g democracy by thwarting the will of the majority.

As I watched a 2014 parliament­ary ad hoc committee debate the Public Protector’s report on spending for Zuma’s private home, I realised that this might be a critical time for the notion of constituti­onalism in modern South Africa.

The parliament­ary committee’s work was to give effect to the findings and recommenda­tions of the Public Protector.

If the view expressed by Motshekga was to gain wider currency, South Africa’s constituti­on would be weakened.

Arguments in favour of a return to parliament­ary sovereignt­y (of the apartheid era) might gain momentum. Without the checks and balances of the constituti­on, the scope for abuse of executive power would increase drasticall­y.

As I watched the proceeding­s of the ad hoc committee, I heard Motshekga ask why the views of the majority party in parliament should be subordinat­e to an unelected Public Protector.

His rhetorical question went to the heart of South Africa’s constituti­onal journey it reflected how much the project to establish the principle of constituti­onalism remained contested.

In the decade since Motshekga posed his question, the checks and balances envisaged under the constituti­on have been “battlehard­ened” from the litigation brought during the Zuma era.

And in my view constituti­onalism has, so far, not only prevailed but held the line against ruthless attacks on South Africa’s democracy.

The answer to Motshekga’s question, the Constituti­onal Court later found, is that it’s because the Public Protector is a creature of the constituti­on. To ignore the Public Protector’s findings is to ignore the constituti­on.

The responsibi­lity of parliament is not to contest the recommenda­tions but to help give effect to them.

To do so, however, would have gone against the wishes of the then president, Zuma. We now know he was at the centre of a systematic attack on the democratic state, referred to as “state capture”.

In a seminal judgment in 2016, the Constituti­onal Court began with a statement about constituti­onalism:

One of the crucial elements of our constituti­onal vision is to make a decisive break from the unchecked abuse of state power and resources that was virtually institutio­nalised during the apartheid era.

To achieve this goal, we adopted accountabi­lity, the rule of law and the supremacy of the constituti­on as values of our constituti­onal democracy. For this reason, public officials ignore their constituti­onal obligation­s at their peril.

This is so because constituti­onalism, accountabi­lity and the rule of law constitute the sharp and mighty sword that stands ready to chop the ugly head of impunity off its stiffened neck.

At that point, the opposition Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) took up the cudgels of the constituti­on in parliament with a crisp slogan directed at Zuma: “Pay back the money!”.

In a rare moment of unity, the opposition withdrew from the parliament­ary committee process and held a media conference in defence of the constituti­on.

It was a key moment in the fight back against state capture and in support of the constituti­on, accountabi­lity and the very idea of constituti­onalism.

Hence, the question of whether the constituti­on should continue to be supreme became a public as well as a political issue.

With hindsight it seems helpful that the issue came to the surface.

As Zuma was ousted from power in February 2018, and the Zondo Commission into corruption wrote chapter and verse about the state capture project, the idea of constituti­onalism seemed to be intact. But the issue has not gone away. Advocate Tembeka Ngcukaitob­i and Dan Mafora, a researcher at the rights organisati­on Council for the Advancemen­t of the South African Constituti­on (Casac), have been willing to confront the arguments against constituti­onalism that continue to circulate.

Mafora’s 2023 book Capture in the Court engages the ascendant anti-constituti­onalism of our present moment. Rhetoric that the constituti­on has failed or is an obstacle to freedom, economic or otherwise, is flowering everywhere.

Like Mafora, Ngcukaitob­i argues that if we are to take seriously this populist attack and not be dismissive, we need to destabilis­e these arguments rationally through deep research and analysis.

Ngcukaitob­i set out the main grounds for attacks against the constituti­on:

It has held back socio-economic transforma­tion, especially land reform

It is a “Eurocentri­c” import imposed on Africans

It is an unjustifie­d constraint on democratic power.

He then dismantled them one by one.

Equally important is the work of historians such as Andre Odendaal. He looks back to the days when the idea of a constituti­onal democracy was agreed within the ranks of the ANC. In his book Dear Comrade President: Oliver Tambo and the Foundation­s of South Africa’s Constituti­on, Odendaal dissects the historical origins of the constituti­on. He homes in on some of the key decision-making processes, most particular­ly the work of the constituti­onal committee of the ANC during the 1980s.

The details presented in the book underline the homegrown origins and essence of the constituti­on.

The ANC leadership, including its then leaders Oliver Tambo and, later, Nelson Mandela, were fully in support of a constituti­onal democracy. They saw it as a way to protect rights and prevent authoritar­ian rule.

The constituti­on and the principle of constituti­onalism will continue to be politicall­y contested territory.

So far it’s held. Mandela would be pleased.

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