
Inside the political turmoil: What Whitfield's dismissal reveals about ANC dynamics
President Cyril Ramaphosa's public statement that he fired DA Deputy Department of Trade Industry and Competition minister Andrew Whitfield because he had travelled outside the country still leaves many questions unanswereed. The apparent mystery around this decision is what gives it so much power. And the DA is now in a difficult position where it cannot accept this, but cannot easily withdraw from the coalition either.
There are many reasons why Whitfield's sacking is so politically potent.
Among the most important is that Ramaphosa's explanation, that he 'was removed as a deputy minister because he undertook an international visit without the permission of the president' does not make sense.
For a start, that trip was several months ago.
What happened between then and now that took the president so long to act? If it is such a clear sacking offense, then why not act immediately? And if there was some reason for a delay, what was it about yesterday's specific date that then allowed him to act?
The president says in his statement that: 'It is not common practice for the President of the Republic of South Africa to provide reasons either for the appointment or the dismissal of Members of the Executive.'
Legally, there is no obligation for a president to give reasons for hirings and firings. But that does not make it democratic. Or morally correct. Or even politically wise.
The president is not a god, or an absolute ruler or a king. He is accountable to the people. For him to follow the precedents of previous presidents who have also not given reasons, particularly Jacob Zuma and Thabo Mbeki, may not be wise.
Both were recalled by the ANC. And while their stories are very different, both had fired someone under strange circumstances that they refused to explain, until the real reasons became obvious later.
It is true, as Ramaphosa points to, that Mbeki fired Nozizwe Madlala-Routledge as deputy health minister in 2007, ostensibly because she travelled without permission.
It is also true that it followed her being in a dispute with the health minister at the time, Manto Tshabalala-Msimang, about the causes of HIV/Aids.
'I'll fix you'
Tshabalala-Msimang's comment to Madlala-Routledge, that 'I'll fix you' was surely a bigger factor than her recent travel.
In the case of Zuma, he fired Nhlanhla Nene as finance minister one night in 2015, and refused to explain why.
You may well remember how that ended.
The other, fairly obvious point, is that nothing stopped the Presidency from announcing the reason for Whitfield's sacking yesterday.
What changed between the public statement confirming he had been removed and Friday? Why could he make public the reason on Friday, but not on Thursday?
Then of course there is Whitfield's public claim that he did ask the Presidency for permission to go on this trip, and was ignored. While that may be through a simple mistake, Whitfield says he followed up every day for nine days.
While Ramaphosa may feel he does not have to respond to every request from a deputy minister, it certainly gives the appearance of being incredibly rude to not reply.
It may well be politically unwise for the president to stick to this claim, when it appears irrational. It gives the appearance that there is another uncomfortable political fact that he is trying to hide.
It must surely be that Ramaphosa fired Whitfield for some reason of which he is ashamed. Or something he'd prefer to keep hidden.
This is why this issue is unlikely to disappear quickly.
For the moment, the most likely real reason is that there is a faction in the ANC demanding Ramaphosa act against the DA. Or its members.
But even that is problematic.
Because the message that this may send to many voters is that Ramaphosa is prepared to act against a DA member for internal ANC reasons, but not against ANC ministers who have done much worse things than Whitfield.
It does not appear to make sense to act against Whitfield while allowing Nobuhle Nkabinde to remain as higher education minister when it is clear she lied about her 'independent panel' to advise her appointing chairpersons to the Sector Education and Training Authorities.
And, as DA leader John Steenhuisen was quick to point out, why fire Whitfield when Ramaphosa has kept David Mahlobo as deputy minister at Water Affairs when there is clear evidence he walked out of the State Security Agency with huge amounts of cash during the State Capture era?
Internal ANC politics
If this is about internal ANC politics it may also be another demonstration that ANC leaders are more focused on internal factions than on winning votes.
This must be one of the big lessons from this. That the ANC is still not focused on winning back the support it has lost. This may well be because many of its decision-makers are much more comfortable dealing with internal dynamics. They are doing what they know, what they have always done — rather than focusing on the hard work of actually governing well enough to win votes.
Meanwhile, the DA's leadership has some difficult decisions to make.
Steenhuisen's threat that Ramaphosa has '48 hours' to act against ANC ministers may well demonstrate the difficulty of his position.
As former strategist Ryan Coetzee and others have pointed out, the DA simply cannot accept having its members fired without any consultation.
Even though the president has confirmed the DA will get to replace Whitfield with another of its members, this effectively gives the ANC a vet on DA appointments.
This they surely cannot accept.
The Freedom Front Plus or the Patriotic Alliance would not accept it either.
The problem for Steenhuisen, of course, is what to do now.
To leave the coalition is fraught with danger. That said, his constituency might well reward him for it.
Some in the ANC might celebrate the DA's departure at first, but might then find that governance becomes virtually impossible.
But any decisions made by the ANC or the DA might well be based on longer-term calculations, about whether voters will punish or reward them for pulling out of the coalition.
And thus this may not be the last strange and deliberately unexplained event. DM

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

IOL News
12 hours ago
- IOL News
Johannesburg's political landscape shifts as ActionSA targets new speaker following Mthembu's removal
The City of Johannesburg council in Braamfontein will vote for a new speaker after ActionSA's Nobuhle Mthembu was axed. Image: Nhlanhla Phillips / Independent Newspapers Political parties represented in the City of Johannesburg council are looking to replace speaker Nobuhle Mthembu after she was ousted this week. ActionSA's caucus leader Lebo Modukanene said the party was fully aware that its refusal to defend Mayor Dada Morero would likely prompt the ANC to retaliate, voting alongside the DA, to remove Mthembu. 'We made it clear that if taking a principled stance came at a political cost, then so be it. ActionSA does not make decisions based on threats or favours - we act on merit, principle, and in the best interests of Johannesburg's residents,' she said. Modukanene added that since joining the ANC-led Government of Local Unity in July last year, ActionSA has maintained an approach based on specific issues. 'We have never given the ANC a blank cheque. Our support must be earned, not assumed. This position was once again demonstrated yesterday (Wednesday). We could not, in good conscience, defend the ANC's Mayor Morero, whose leadership has failed Johannesburg,' she explained. According to Modukanene, ActionSA supported the ANC's chief whip, Sithembiso Zungu, whose work in promoting discipline and functionality in the council has been commendable. 'Speaker Mthembu served with exceptional integrity and fairness, and her deep commitment to public engagement set a standard for leadership in this city. Her removal has nothing to do with performance - it is a symptom of the political decay that continues to undermine governance in Johannesburg,' she added. ActionSA is consulting internally and its leadership will continue engaging the ANC on this and other matters of common interest. 'We will communicate our final position once those consultations have been concluded,' said Modukanene.


The Citizen
12 hours ago
- The Citizen
Weekly economic wrap: Oil and rand on political seesaw
Never a dull moment on the economic front these days, it seems, as politics continue to affect oil prices and exchange rates. What could have been a quiet week on the economic front turned out to be a political seesaw for the oil price as well as the rand, with the looming war in the Middle East first causing a substantial increase in oil prices, before the price receded again after a ceasefire was negotiated. Tracey-Lee Solomon, economist at the Bureau for Economic Research (BER), says the week was marked by heightened domestic as well as international tensions. 'At home, friction intensified between the two largest parties in the government of national unity (GNU), the ANC and the DA, as public disagreements resurfaced. 'The DA later said that the dismissal of deputy minister for trade, industry and competition, Andrew Whitfield, stemmed from his participation in a DA-led trip to Washington undertaken without presidential approval.' ALSO READ: Deputy Minister warns low-income countries will be hit hardest by geopolitical tensions Will the Fed cut interest rates in the US? In the US, Solomon says, the Federal Reserve (Fed) officials shared mixed but cautiously optimistic views on potential rate cuts, with Fed chair Jerome Powell saying a cut could occur 'sooner rather than later' if inflation remains controlled, but emphasised there is no urgency. Currently, markets expect a 25-basis-point cut in September. She points out that the US attack and limited Iranian response meant that it was a volatile week in financial markets, but ultimately, many assets reverted to pre-strike levels, and in some cases, markets displayed even more risk-taking behaviour than before. Bianca Botes, director at Citadel Global also says the ongoing conflict between the US President Donald Trump and Powell, has once again taken centre stage. 'The dispute, which has been simmering for many years, was reignited by Powell's testimony before Congress this week. 'Now that Trump is openly discussing replacing Powell, the issue has taken on heightened significance and the markets are bracing themselves for potential shifts in US monetary and interest rate policy, as well as questioning the independence of the most important central bank in the world.' ALSO READ: Navigating economic headwinds of grey list and US tariffs – BLSA Rand wins against the dollar again 'After briefly strengthening at the start of the week, the US dollar was trading about 2% weaker on Thursday after Trump said he might announce Powell's successor earlier than expected. For the rand, this meant a 2.0% appreciation against the greenback this week and minimal change against the UK pound sterling and euro,' Solomon says. Botes says while the rand traded at R17.8673/$ following strong trade since Monday, the weakening is seen as a correction following breaks below key technical levels and nervousness around the latest DA-ANC spat. Busisiwe Nkonki and Isaac Matshego, economists at the Nedbank Group Economic Unit, say the rand firmed further at the start of the week, in line with the broad trend in emerging market currencies, but weakened marginally on Thursday after news broke of Whitfield's dismissal. 'The local unit increased to R17.74/$ on Wednesday from R18.01 last Friday, but lost ground on Thursday to trade around R17.85 on Friday morning. The rand was trading at R17.81/$ on Friday afternoon. ALSO READ: Global mining sector revenue fell by 3% in 2024, but gold revenues increased 15% Commodity markets: Oil and gold decrease In commodity markets, the alleviation of supply risk caused the Brent Crude Oil price to drop by almost 18% compared to the previous week. Solomon says that before the 12-day Iran-Israel war, prevailing expectations were for a supply surplus this year amid weak demand and rising OPEC+ production. 'Once the Strait of Hormuz closure threat was largely removed, markets reverted to pricing in this surplus.' Meanwhile, the gold price declined by 1.3% this week as market tensions eased and calm returned. Solomon says despite gold trading steadily between $3 300 and $3 400 per ounce in recent weeks, the lack of upward movement does not signal a retreat from safe-haven assets. 'In fact, investors have turned to other precious metals, with platinum standing out. Platinum prices surged by 9% this week alone. In addition to supply and demand fundamentals, this is partly driven by its relative affordability compared to gold, making it an increasingly attractive alternative for investors.' ALSO READ: What Israel–Iran conflict means for South African economy Oil price holding while ceasefire holds Nkonki and Matshego say the Brent Crude Oil price was around $71.50 per barrel on Friday morning, dropping further this week on indications that the ceasefire between Israel and Iran is holding and after Trump announced that US and Iranian negotiators would meet next week. 'The gold price also eased further on moderating geopolitical risks, easing to $3 285 an ounce on Friday morning, while platinum is softer at $1 376 an ounce. Botes says West Texas Intermediary crude also rebounded to above $65.08/barrel on unexpected US crude inventory draws and strong demand signals. 'Geopolitical risks persisted, with Iran threatening the Strait of Hormuz (handling 20% of global liquified natural gas trade), while the expanded OPEC+ supply decisions and Canadian oil sands production added volatility. Goldman Sachs warned that Brent could surge to $110/barrel if Middle East disruptions escalate.' In addition, she points out that the gold price moderated to $3,383.80/ounce, reaching a four-week low, as the Israel-Iran ceasefire appears to be holding and reduced safe haven demand. However, she says, lingering trade tensions and Fed rate cut expectations are still providing some support. ALSO READ: Disturbing survey reveals borrowing now a lifeline in SA Producer price index slows to 0.1% in May Headline factory-gate inflation, measured by the Producer Price Index (PPI) for final manufactured goods, slowed to 0.1% in May 2025 from 0.5% in April. Lebohang Namo, economist at the BER, says this was the lowest reading since November 2024. Food, beverages and tobacco products were the largest contributor (3.7%), while basic and fabricated metals (-12.3%) and chemicals, rubber and plastic products (-1.4%) were the largest detractors. On a monthly basis, PPI fell by 0.3% from 0.5% in April. Nkonki and Matshego say the outcome was lower than their forecast of 0.8% and the market's of 0.7%. 'The downward pressure primarily came from coke, petroleum, chemicals, rubber and plastics. Deflation in this category deepened, with prices down 6.4%, after falling by 5.5% in April. 'The drag came from fuel prices, reflecting the impact of lower global oil prices and a firmer rand. Costs remained subdued or declined further in most other categories. The prices of most food products declined further, albeit at a slower pace. The only exception was meat prices, which rose by a relatively steep 10.5%.' ALSO READ: Index reveals consumers are willing to spend money, but not too much Consumer confidence seemed to recover from slump in first quarter After plunging from -6 to -20 index points in the first quarter of 2025, the FNB/BER Consumer Confidence Index (CCI) rebounded to -10 in the second quarter. Namo says a number of adverse shocks knocked consumer sentiment during the first quarter, including the finance minister's (aborted) proposal to hike Vat by two percentage points, the fallout between the ANC and the DA about the budget, a brief return to stage 6 load shedding, souring diplomatic relations between South Africa and the US and Trump's alarming import tariff proposals. 'Consumer confidence is also still well below the average reading of -1 since 1994, signalling that consumers remain relatively pessimistic about the outlook for the economy and their household finances over the next twelve months.' ALSO READ: Take-home pay slides for third month with grim job opportunities and earnings Unemployment continued its upward trend According to Statistics SA's Quarterly Employment Statistics, employment fell by 74 000 jobs (-0.7%) in March to just under 10.6 million formal sector jobs.


Eyewitness News
13 hours ago
- Eyewitness News
Axed deputy DTIC minister, Whitfield, says he was sidelined by Tau for last 6 months
JOHANNESBURG - Fired deputy minister of trade and industry, Andrew Whitfield, said that he had spent the past six months being sidelined by Minister Parks Tau. Whitfield, who said that he received no reason for his axing by President Cyril Ramaphosa, insisted that he acted in good faith during his time in government. He told 702 that he assumed he was fired because of a trip he took to Washington on behalf of his political party, the Democratic Alliance (DA), in March. Whitfield said that he had never undermined the minister. "I have objected and opposed to a number of issues. I have done that discreetly within the department, in fact through writing to the minister, whether it's on the legal sector codes, the broad-based economic empowerment legal sector codes, whether it's the Transformation Fund or a range of other issues around governance, board appointments, cadre deployments, you name it." Whitfield's political party argued that he was fired for succeeding at his job, which included opposing some appointments, halting what they claim would have been looting from the Transformation Fund and keeping an eye on the national lottery tender. Whitfield said that he still had questions about some of the processes that had unfolded. "And so the minister included me at the end of last year and I was then sidelined for the last six months. So, I have had no line of sight of the process, but certainly have had some questions, which I would like to pose to the minister if given the opportunity, which I have not yet had."