The Mercury

DA, ANC at loggerhead­s over Concourt ruling on candidates

- BALDWIN NDABA baldwin.ndaba@inl.co.za

THE ANC and DA were at loggerhead­s moments after the Constituti­onal Court dismissed the opposition party’s applicatio­n to stop the Electoral Commission of SA (IEC) from reopening the registrati­on of candidates.

The Concourt ruling was delivered yesterday – on the eve of the IEC’s deadline for all parties to register their candidates by 5pm today – to allow all parties a chance to participat­e in the upcoming local government elections on November 1.

The ANC was one of the parties that failed to register all its candidates ahead of the initial deadline of August 23, prompting the DA to accuse the IEC of favouring the governing party when it set down September 21 as a new date for registrati­on of candidates.

The DA lodged an applicatio­n in the Concourt arguing that the IEC decision on September 6 to reopen the candidate nomination process, was unconstitu­tional, unlawful and invalid, and called for it to be set aside.

The applicatio­n came off the back of a separate urgent applicatio­n (the main applicatio­n) launched by the commission under the same case number, in terms of which it sought an order to the effect that it could hold the local government elections which were scheduled for 27 October in February 2022, due to the risk of the election not being free and fair because of the Covid-19 pandemic.

In the alternativ­e, the Commission sought an order declaring that its failure to hold the local government elections on October 27 was unconstitu­tional, and that such declaratio­n of invalidity be suspended to allow it until February 23, 2022 to correct the constituti­onal defect.

The Concourt ruled against the DA and it also found that the claims that the motive to allow for the reopening of registrati­on was aimed at favouring the ANC invalid.

In her reaction to the judgment, DA Federal Council chairperso­n Helen Zille said her party accepted the decision of the Constituti­onal Court but said the court did not draw a final conclusion on whether the IEC had an ulterior motive in reopening the candidate nomination process, saying it could not draw this conclusion merely on the basis of the papers before the court.

“Given the fact that the IEC has previously disqualifi­ed parties that did not meet deadlines, and given their explicit statement before the Constituti­onal Court that it would not be possible to reopen voter or candidate registrati­on if the elections were not postponed to 2022, the DA notes the 180 degree turn made subsequent­ly by the IEC and the consequenc­es of its decisions, which will undoubtedl­y favour the ANC, despite its manifest failures in sticking by the rules laid down for all parties,” Zille said

She said the DA would continue to monitor the freeness and fairness of the election and would not hesitate to use the opportunit­y opened by the Concourt to challenge the IEC if any further examples of bending the rules to favour the ANC emerged during the election.

The ANC welcomed the court decision saying the judgment vindicated the position taken by it that the right of citizens to vote was inextricab­ly linked to their right to stand for public office.

ANC national spokespers­on Pule Mabe said the ruling party also confirmed the correctnes­s of the support given to the IEC’s decision by the ACDP, AIC, Al Jama-ah, Cope, FF Plus, Good, PAC and the UDM.

“We call upon the DA to refrain from further attacks on the integrity of the judiciary and the IEC,” Mabe said.

The SACP also welcomed the Concourt’s decision.

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