The Star Early Edition

SA’s democracy is robust

The Public Protector’s office has become a subject of public debate, writes Theunis Roux

- Roux is a Professor of Law at UNSW Sydney, Australia

SEEMINGLY effective constituti­onal institutio­ns can be quickly undermined by the actions of the people who serve in them. If we didn’t know that already, the South African Constituti­onal Court’s recent decision in the Reserve Bank case makes the point crystal clear.

In her response to the bank’s applicatio­n to set aside certain remedial action, the court found that Public Protector Busisiwe Mkhwebane acted in such bad faith as to justify the imposition of a personal costs order.

The public protector’s office, previously lauded for its investigat­ion into the illegal use of public money on former president Jacob Zuma’s private Nkandla homestead, is consequent­ly now the subject of anxious public debate.

Two concerns, in particular, have been raised.

The first has to do with whether the Constituti­onal Court’s decision reveals any flaws in the design of the country’s 1996 Constituti­on.

Should such significan­t powers have been invested in the public protector’s office when, as we can now see, they are vulnerable to abuse?

The second concern relates to the raft of litigation in which the public protector is involved, and Mkhwebane’s own recent threat to go to court to oppose any attempt by Parliament to remove her.

Is this yet more evidence of the descent of the country’s constituti­onal democracy into “law-fare”? Constituti­onal design flaws? The public protector’s powers are set out in Section 182(1)(a) of the Constituti­on. It states the office is there to investigat­e any conduct in state affairs, or in the public administra­tion in any sphere of government, that is alleged or suspected to be improper or to result in any impropriet­y or prejudice.

These are indeed significan­t powers that both the previous and present incumbents of the office have used to telling effect. But they are no broader than they need to be to give the office the requisite teeth.

The more important section perhaps is section 194, on the removal of the public protector. It provides that this may occur “on the ground of misconduct, incapacity or incompeten­ce”, following a committee hearing and then a two-thirds majority vote by the National Assembly.

Again, there is nothing obviously wrong with this provision. Design the removal procedure in a way that makes it too easy to activate and you weaken the institutio­n. Make it too hard to use and you licence an individual to become a loose cannon. Section 194 seems to get this balance right.

Beyond this, the proper functionin­g of the public protector’s office depends on two things: the courts’ preparedne­ss to use their review powers to overturn any unwarrante­d findings and informed public scrutiny of the public protector’s actions. No constituti­onal-design features, however prescient, can make up for the absence of those two factors.

Fortunatel­y, South Africans know the value of judicial independen­ce. And the example set by the previous public protector, Thuli Madonsela, has made them care enough about the institutio­n to defend it when threatened.

Thus, as broad as the public protector’s powers are, they are tempered by powerful and independen­t courts and by an active and engaged civil society. Is litigation replacing politics? Is the current round of litigation involving the public protector another worrisome example of the phenomenon of law-fare?

Or does it in fact indicate something fundamenta­l about how constituti­onal democracie­s work?

The term “law-fare” was coined by expatriate South African anthropolo­gists Jean and John Comaroff. In its original form, it describes a situation in which the law is used to pursue political ends, both by the politicall­y powerful and the politicall­y weak.

The term has been popularise­d in South Africa by Judge Dennis Davis and lawyer Michelle Le Roux, whose recently published book deploys it as a central concept. In their usage, lawfare connotes the worrisome tendency in post-apartheid South Africa for disputes that previously would have been settled politicall­y to be resolved legally.

If there is a concern, it is that the courts have once again been forced to act as a last line of defence. At just the time that it appeared that the public protector was emerging as a strong institutio­n supporting democracy, it has been undermined by the actions of its current head.

This shows South Africa is still struggling to broaden the institutio­nal base of its constituti­onal democracy so that it has multiple veto points at which to check the abuse of power.

To function effectivel­y, constituti­onal institutio­ns also need to be infused with values and traditions so that they are less dependent on the whims of particular office-bearers.

Constituti­onalism is an aspiration­al ideal in this sense, rather than a finite goal that can be achieved once and for all. Neverthele­ss, if the vigour of the public debate surroundin­g the public protector is anything to go by, it is an ideal that appears to be alive and kicking in South Africa.

Constituti­onal institutio­ns need to be infused with values and traditions so that they are less dependent on the whims of individual­s

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