The Herald (South Africa)

No-one linked to corruption will represent ANC in the elections, says Motlanthe

● Party sets out rules for nomination of candidates in both local and national polls

- Nonkululek­o Njilo

‘These are very tight timelines and anyone who faces criminal charges or other allegation­s of wrongdoing would fail the test in the interviewi­ng and vetting panel processes’

Former deputy president and ANC electoral committee head Kgalema Motlanthe says members hoping to contest the local government elections proclaimed for October 27 who face allegation­s of corruption and wrongdoing will not become the party’s representa­tives.

This was because they would not add value to the local sphere of government, he said yesterday.

Motlanthe was addressing the media with acting secretary-general Jessie Duarte.

They said the ANC was operating as though elections would go ahead on the proclaimed date, though the party has joined the IEC’s bid at the Constituti­onal Court to defer the elections to February next year.

The current municipal term expires on August 1.

The constituti­on stipulates that when the five-year term of a municipal council expires, an election must be held within 90 days of the date on which that council’s term expired.

The IEC wants permission to be allowed to conduct elections beyond the 90-day time frame, so they can be free and fair.

“We are preparing as though the elections will be held on October 27,” Motlanthe said.

Motlanthe, along with seven other members, was elected by the party’s national executive committee to prescribe rules for the nomination of ANC candidates to serve as its representa­tives in both local and national government spheres.

He said his team had to hit the ground running to establish the rules.

“The new rules as set out by the electoral committee place much emphasis on the role of communitie­s in nominating ward councillor­s, such that the branch general meetings [BGMs] which are usually exclusive to ANC members only serve as a starting point for the candidate selection process.

“The end points of this process are community meetings and community votes by secret ballot which would result in the selection of the ward and PR candidates.”

Motlanthe said 3,200 branches, making up 80%, had completed their branch meetings.

Eight-hundred remained outstandin­g, despite the Wednesday deadline.

These branches will now have until Monday to complete their community processes in the selection of candidates.

“These are very tight timelines and anyone who faces criminal charges or other allegation­s of wrongdoing would fail the test in the interviewi­ng and vetting panel processes.

“The whole rationale behind these rules is to ensure that we end up with candidates who will be without reproach and candidates who will add value, who’ll bring experience and expertise to the local sphere of government,” he said.

The new rules stipulate that in every ward where the ANC has a presence, four candidates will be nominated and presented to the community.

The final candidate will be the one with the most votes among the nominees, after an open community vote by secret ballot.

“The person who receives the most votes will be the ANC ward candidate if he or she is a fit and proper person in accordance with the law and constituti­on of SA,” Motlanthe said.

Motlanthe emphasised that unethical, corrupt and immoral conduct, including the buying of votes or the use of money to influence the outcome of the candidate selection process, was strictly prohibited.

“The conduct and moral integrity of ANC candidates for the local government elections is under a serious spotlight and severe scrutiny by the electoral committee through its provincial list committees as well as regional interviewi­ng and vetting panels in all the provinces and regions.

“Comrades who are found to have engaged in corrupt activities shall be summarily expelled from the ANC. ”—

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