The Independent on Saturday

DA must get its house in order

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THE DA prides itself on being South Africa’s official opposition party, hellbent on exposing corruption and presenting a transforme­d, unified front.

However, cracks in the party appear to be widening, showing signs of an organisati­on in disarray.

This week, DA MP Phumzile van Damme resigned from Parliament and as national spokespers­on of the party.

“My resignatio­n as an MP is not because the DA is a so-called ‘racist party’ but because of a clique of individual­s – and in order not to make the good women and men still in the DA suffer, I will not delve further into this,” she said.

A few hours later, however,

Van Damme made a U-turn on her resignatio­n.

This begs the question why she would deem it necessary to make this statement in her public resignatio­n letter.

Perhaps the real task for the DA is working towards changing the prevailing perception that it is a “racist party“.

Several senior DA members have either left the party or been removed in the recent past.

In 2019, Herman Mashaba left the party and resigned as Joburg mayor, citing ideologica­l difference­s with the party’s leaders.

This year, a qualificat­ions scandal enveloped the party.

Bonginkosi Madikizela resigned as DA leader in the Western Cape and as transport and public works MEC after it emerged he had lied about having a BCom degree.

National chief whip Natasha Mazzone was embroiled in slanging matches with political opponents over her lack of qualificat­ions.

Saldanha mayor Marius Koen is also accused of lying about his qualificat­ions. DA Federal Council chairperso­n Helen Zille has referred the matter to the party’s federal legal commission for investigat­ion.

Then there’s City of Cape Town mayoral committee member Xanthea Limberg, who claimed, on a summarised CV she submitted to the Provincial Executive Committee for her nomination as an executive member, to hold degrees from UCT and Unisa.

However, it appears she never completed the listed degrees and holds only certificat­es from CPUT and UCT.

Subsequent­ly, DA leader

John Steenhuise­n called for the independen­t verificati­on of every DA public representa­tive's qualificat­ions.

Only time will tell whether this will hurt the DA in the upcoming local government elections.

If ever there was a time for the DA to get its house in order, it’s now.

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