The Herald (South Africa)

Steenhuise­n proud of DA’s recovery since Maimane ‘turned his back’

- Andisiwe Makinana

DA leader John Steenhuise­n says the party has recovered from the 2019 crisis when its erstwhile leader, Mmusi Maimane, quit months after a disastrous election performanc­e.

Steenhuise­n, speaking at a media briefing ahead of the party’s manifesto launch tomorrow, said the DA was able to mount a competitiv­e campaign ahead of the November 1 municipal polls despite the disruption­s of two years ago.

While he expressed confidence in the party’s recovery, Steenhuise­n would not divulge what the DA’s internal polling indicated ahead of the upcoming elections.

“But I am very comfortabl­e with the recovery the DA has made in a very difficult situation.

“I think I’m very proud of the fact that we’ve been able to turn things around and we are competitiv­e in this election,” he said.

“There are very few parties in the world that survive a leader walking out on the job and turning their back on people that put them in that position,” he said.

Maimane quit the DA in October 2019 saying the party was no longer the vehicle best suited to take forward the vision of building one SA for all.

This was shortly after an organisati­onal review panel concluded he was indecisive and blamed him for the DA’s electoral decline in May that year.

Steenhuise­n said the party would focus on winning small towns in the elections.

In previous elections, the party paid more attention to winning metropolit­an municipali­ties.

Steenhuise­n has in recent weeks criss-crossed the country, visiting far-flung and rural communitie­s to hear first-hand about people’s service delivery concerns.

He is concerned, however, that the smaller parties contesting elections may hamper the DA’s chances of winning, which may work in favour of the ANC. “Yes, small parties can affect the DA.

“Take for instance a ward where the DA has a small majority but is able to hang on to that seat, and then you have smaller parties who are not interested in taking on the ANC but want to be an opposition to the opposition.”

He said such parties did not go after the ANC but tried to weaken the DA.

Both the smaller party and the DA would not get enough votes to win the ward, and the ANC or the EFF, the DA’s toughest competitor­s, would win in the end.

“People must be careful and not play with fire in this election [by] voting for a party that has no chance of winning and will end up with two councillor­s that sit at the back of a hall for the entire five years.”

He said such parties were not able to fight for their voters, which was the main aim of an opposition party, especially in the local government sphere.

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