The Citizen (Gauteng)

Executive chaos bedevils govt

CHANGE: 14 CABINET RESHUFFLES SINCE MAY 2009

- Rorisang Kgosana rorisangk@citizen.co.za

164 changes made to the national executive since Zuma became president.

South Africa’s current social and economic shambles and turmoil can be laid squarely at the door of the constant swapping of ministers, with at least 14 Cabinet reshuffles and 129 people serving as minister or deputy minister since 2009.

In a report titled Executive Chaos, author and the Institute of Race Relations (IRR) head of politics and governance Gareth van Onselen found that one of the main reasons why the country was in turmoil was due to the “discontinu­ity in leadership”.

Since Jacob Zuma elected his first Cabinet on May 10, 2009 until October 9, 2018, a total of 164 changes have been made to the national executive.

This includes the swearing in of President Cyril Ramaphosa in February this year.

One hundred and twenty-nine people have served as minister or deputy minister. Fifty-seven of those were no longer part of the national executive.

The average national executive lasts 165 working days before it is reconstitu­ted.

The longest lasted 372 working days, while the shortest, Des van Rooyen, served just three working days.

“There are many reasons for the ANC’s failure to deliver over the last nine years, but one of the biggest contributi­ng factors is undoubtedl­y the discontinu­ity in leadership, at the very top.

“Executive chaos at the top equals delivery chaos on the ground,” Van Onselen said.

And while the faces aren’t always new, there is also a tendency to simply reshuffle executives, even when some come with significan­t baggage.

ANC member of parliament Hlengiwe Mkhize and Home Affairs Minister Malusi Gigaba lead in occupying the most positions – six and five different positions in Cabinet respective­ly.

But the shifting of Gigaba seemed to serve the interests of the Gupta family as there were questionab­le developmen­ts in each portfolio he held, political analyst Somadoda Fikeni told The Citizen.

“With Gigaba, you begin to see the effort to use him, whether he succeeded or not, in the most critical posts such as public enterprise­s. When he’s there, you see an interest from the Gupta’s and others.

“With home affairs, you see developmen­ts such as the granting of citizenshi­p.

“Then finance and Treasury – there have been implicatio­ns for the [Public Investment Corporatio­n] and for [the South African Revenue Service].”

Gigaba seemed to be moved to department­s which were potential targets,” Fikeni said.

According to the report, the most unstable department­s were communicat­ions, which had eight ministers, finance and public service with seven and the department of energy, with six ministers since 2009. The four most retained posts were basic education minister (Angie Motshekga), economic developmen­t minister (Ebrahim Patel), health minister (Aaron Motsoaledi) and minister of trade and industry (Rob Davies). The basic education department boasts an unchanged minister and deputy minister in the recent presidenti­al terms.

That, however, was only because their portfolios were of little or no economic interest, and to maintain relations with Motshekga, former leader of the ANC Women’s League, Fikeni said.

“She was also supportive of the president. [He] might have been reluctant to move in that portfolio or seen to be targeting that constituen­cy which he needed for his campaign.” –

National executive average is 165 working days.

 ?? Picture: Neil McCartney ?? ALL EARS. Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi during yesterday’s opening of the Presidenti­al Health Summit, at Birchwood Hotel in Boksburg.
Picture: Neil McCartney ALL EARS. Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi during yesterday’s opening of the Presidenti­al Health Summit, at Birchwood Hotel in Boksburg.

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