The Citizen (Gauteng)

Elbowed out of politics

People simply do not like Patricia de Lille for apparently the same reasons they do not like Mazibuko, Khoza, Ramphele and possibly Moonsamy.

- Simnikiwe Hlatshanen­i

The burgeoning wealth of talent, experience and education among South African women is wasted and barely welcomed in politics. Over the past five years, we have seen female politician­s of notable intelligen­ce rising through the ranks only to slowly fade out of the spotlight, rarely on good terms with the ailing, bumbling septuagena­rian male counterpar­ts who will remain political leaders until they die.

In the case of the EFF, there are younger and angrier alpha males who are only slightly more tolerant of breathing the same air as an intelligen­t woman with ideas and opinions.

To be a black female politician in South Africa, with a voice that doesn’t submit to the droning, crackly old male voices is usually a very shortlived but interestin­g adventure and seemingly, nothing more.

In a society that still giggles at the thought of a female president (unless it is part of an ominous plot to run a gangster administra­tion by proxy), I imagine it must have been difficult to get where the likes of Magdalene Moonsamy and Makhosi Khoza were about two years ago before being vacuumed into the female-politician-sized wormhole from which no one ever returns.

The former left the ANC after the expulsion of ANC Youth League leader Julius Malema in 2012 and was an integral part of the subsequent formation of the EFF. I first met her when I was a radio producer at Power FM in 2014 when she was to present a three-hour show as part of a Women’s Day weekend. Not being much of a rocket scientist myself, I found her fascinatin­gly articulate, poised and smart.

Khoza once told me about that new political party whose name we have all forgotten, that South Africa was ripe and ready for a political party with a feminist agenda.

I agreed with her at the time. She had just quit the ANC and was to hit the ground running with a bold new political career.

I found it exciting that after the disappoint­ingly brief firework that was Mamphela Ramphele’s moment with Agang, another female political leader was taking it upon herself to put gender politics in the mainstream.

Moonsamy and Khoza have since made a quiet exit from politics to pursue profession­al careers, seemingly because they were simply too “loud”, “naggy” and “emotional” for the sensitive ears of the men who remain in power despite being equally loud, naggy and emotional. They are in a growing list of women who have been elbowed out of politics after being described at some point as some version of bossy, irrational and difficult to work with.

Lindiwe Mazibuko was ostensibly described as arrogant and autocratic by members of the DA parliament­ary caucus she led before resigning in 2014. Similarly, Cape Town mayor Patricia de Lille, who is about to be between jobs, is now facing disciplina­ry charges by the DA.

De Lille was described by members of the DA Cape Town caucus as bossy, autocratic, impossible to work with and “scary” (someone literally described her as scary). What strikes me about this descriptio­n is that it outweighed the very serious allegation­s against her as the main bone of contention the caucus has with her.

It played an integral role in the two motions of no confidence she recently faced. People simply do not like her for apparently the same reasons they do not like Mazibuko, Khoza, Ramphele and possibly Moonsamy.

This plague does not seem to affect the formidable Helen Zille who will not be told what not to tweet by any man ever. That is an interestin­g dynamic I think I will leave it up to the reader’s discretion to speculate upon.

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