The Herald (South Africa)

Zuma lands an F in report card

- Caiphus Kgosana

PRESIDENT Jacob Zuma has failed in office and should no longer be entrusted with running the country, according to the DA, which scored Zuma an F in its annual cabinet report card.

Releasing the report card in parliament yesterday, DA parliament­ary leader Lindiwe Mazibuko said a number of factors had contribute­d to Zuma’s dismal rating. These included: ý The lacklustre response to tensions leading up to the Marikana tragedy;

ý The ruling by the Constituti­onal Court that Zuma’s appointmen­t of Menzi Simelane as head of the National Prosecutio­ns Authority was “irrational and invalid”;

ý Planned upgrades to Zuma’s Nkandla home, reportedly valued at R250-million; and

ý A lack of economic policy direction, resulting in a downgrade of South Africa by credit rating agencies Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s.

“This is a president who does not have one singular achievemen­t to his name other than keeping himself in office,” the DA said.

The DA scored Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe a C and praised “his dedication to the constituti­on” and his “honest approach” in dealing with the challenges facing the government. But Motlanthe should “get off the fence” and articulate his policy

‘ The president doesn’t have one singular achievemen­t to his name

preference more clearly and do more to “crack the whip” as leader of government business in parliament.

Other ministers who scored an F include State Security Minister Siyabonga Cwele, who was accused of driving an “unconstitu­tional” secrecy bill agenda and Police Minister Nathi Mthethwa, who, the DA says, has presided over the “militarisa­tion of an increasing­ly violent police force”.

Labour Minister Mildred Oliphant, who was described as having been absent during a number of big labour disputes, also got an F.

Interestin­gly, Basic Education Minister Angie Motshekga scored a D despite a year marked by her department’s failure to deliver textbooks to Limpopo pupils.

DA federal chairman Wilmot James said Motshekga’s heart was in the right place. He said her department was mostly a policy implementa­tion driver that was let down by dysfunctio­nal provinces.

Other top performers in the DA’s report card were Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi and Naledi Pandor in her previous portfolio of Science and Technology. Both scored an A.

Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan, Trade and Industry Minister Rob Davies and Tourism Minister Marthinus van Schalkwyk all scored Bs.

Cabinet spokeswoma­n Phumla Williams rejected the DA’s scorecard, saying the government had its own evaluation and monitoring system to police the performanc­e of ministers.

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