Steenhuisen's challenge to Ramaphosa: A look at the DA's role in the GNU
DA leader John Steenhuisen says the DA would vote against budgets of the departments that are led by ministers that are allegedly corrupt.
Image: Henk Kruger / Independent Newspapers
Without the DA, the government will continue to function as the ANC will invite other parties, which are represented in parliament, to join the Government of National Unity (GNU).
In anticipation that the DA might quit, political analyst Tessa Dooms said even if the DA were to leave the 10-party GNU, the ANC would bring in eight other parties to replace it.
Addressing the press briefing in Cape Town on Saturday afternoon, it became clear that DA leader John Steenhuisen had no intention to announce the party's departure from the GNU.
'If the ANC wants to kick the DA out for fighting against corruption, well, so be it,' said Steenhuisen.
The DA had on Thursday reacted harshly to President Cyril Ramaphosa removing its MP, Andrew Whitfield, as the Trade, Industry and Competition deputy minister on Wednesday. In a statement, Steenhuisen threatened the GNU.
He called on Ramaphosa to replace Whitfield with a capable DA MP, who can continue to deliver and service the department.
Video Player is loading.
Play Video
Play
Unmute
Current Time
0:00
/
Duration
-:-
Loaded :
0%
Stream Type LIVE
Seek to live, currently behind live
LIVE
Remaining Time
-
0:00
This is a modal window.
Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window.
Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque
Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps
Reset
restore all settings to the default values Done
Close Modal Dialog
End of dialog window.
Advertisement
Next
Stay
Close ✕
Ad Loading
However, Steenhuisen announced that the party would no longer participate in the National Dialogue, which Ramaphosa launched to unite the country after last year's national elections.
Steenhuisen challenged Ramaphosa to prove that he was not acting in bias against Whitfied by also removing ANC's Human Settlements Minister Thembi Simelane, Higher Education Minister Nobuhle Nkabane, and Water and Sanitation deputy minister David Mahlobo whom he accused of underperforming and corruption.
While the DA will remain in the GNU, Steenhuisen said it would protest against corruption by voting against the budget votes of the departments that are led by alleged corrupt ministers.
'The second and critical step that the DA is taking is to vote against upcoming departmental budget votes for the departments headed by Simelane, Nkabane, and other ANC accused ministers.
'We will keep voting against those budget votes until those ministers are removed,' said Steenhuisen.
'As long as ANC members implicated in corruption remain as members of the executive, the DA will not support the departmental budget,' Steenhuisen said.
He called on the ANC to urgently change the way it engages with its coalition partners and also fight corruption and grow the economy.
'We are demanding that the dialogue should not proceed until President Ramaphosa fires ANC corrupt individuals in the national executive.
Political analysts had already predicted that the DA would not leave the GNU as it was enjoying some powers.
Dooms said Ramaphosa fired Whitfield, knowing that the DA was powerless to break the GNU.
'It is very unlikely that the DA would leave because the opportunity to have as many ministerial roles, positions and power right now is one that they are not ready to give up.
'Or, they can say that they won't vote with the ANC in parliament,' said Dooms.
University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN) political analyst, Sakhile Hadebe, was also of the view that the GNU was something that could not be easily collapsed.
'The survival of GNU can be threatened by something huge [that] I can't imagine right now, not firing disobedient Dep Ministers.
'DA enjoys sizable power in that GNU, they are not just helping the ANC to govern,' he said.
Another UKZN political analyst, Zakhele Ndlovu's concern was not concerned about how long the GNU would last.
'We should be worried that the inability of the GNU to forge cooperation comes at a significant cost,' he said.
Ndlovu said the GNU's resilience has gone through a lot of tests and survived disagreements on the Basic Education Laws Amendment Act, the National Health Insurance Act, the Expropriation Act, and the budget impasse in its first year.
'It appears that GNU partners are still learning the art of cooperation, compromise, negotiation, and accountability, to name a few,' said Ndlovu.
The DA's spokesperson Willie Aucump said that if the decision to fire Whitfield was not protested, it would set a bad precedent for ANC, using Ramaphosa to fire its members from the cabinet for minor offences.
Ramaphosa fired Whitfield for breaching the Ministerial Handbook by taking a trip to the United States of America on behalf of the DA without the president's approval.
Ahead of the trip early this year, Whitfield wrote to Ramaphosa on February 12 requesting approval, but Ramaphosa did not respond to the request, leading to him leaving the country unauthorised and apologising on his return.
'What if next week the ANC becomes fed up with Dr. Leon Schreiber being minister of Home Affairs, Siviwe Gwarube being minister of Basic Education, and the president then gets instructions from his party to fire them?
'We cannot have ministers working with an axe behind their necks that they might be fired by the president anytime,' said Aucamp.
He said that although the constitution empowers the president to hire and fire ministers and deputies at will without having to explain, there was another decision that he should take into consideration when he makes decisions, 'because the ANC is not governing alone anymore.'
'They are a minority party, and they have partners within this NGU that he needs to consult with as he has to respect the Statement of Intent that his party signed when the GNU was formed,' he said.
He said the fact that the president ignored Steenhuisen's request for permission to communicate with his party before Whitfield was fired showed that Ramaphosa was undermining the GNU partnership.
The DA believes that the underlying reason for Whitfied was that he was opposed to certain lucrative tenders, including the lottery contract, which was worth R7 billion, being awarded to politically connected people.
The DA believed that Ramaphosa deliberately ignored Whitfield's letter requesting permission.
'Ten days went by without getting a reply from the president, and on every single one of those 10 days, Whitfield followed up with the office of the president and the president and he did not get a reply.
'If the president did not want him to go, why didn't the president just write him a letter saying, 'I do not grant you permission to travel overseas?'
'Why does the president ignore a request letter from a member of the executive? The deputy minister did what he was supposed to do.
'One would have expected the office of the president to be more efficient and reply to the deputy minister,' said Aucamp.
When asked why Ramaphosa failed to grant or deny the traveling permission, his spokesperson, Vincent Magwenya, said, 'That's not the issue.'
'He did not have permission to travel, period. If the President felt his trip was a government priority, he would have responded in the affirmative.
'It doesn't hold that just because you did not get a response in the time you expected it, then you can go against the rule,' said Magwenya.
bongani.hans@inl.co.za

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

IOL News
an hour ago
- IOL News
DA clashes with Ramaphosa over dismissal but stays in coalition — for now
The Democratic Alliance (DA) has decided to remain part of South Africa's government of national unity despite rising tensions with President Cyril Ramaphosa over the recent dismissal of one of its deputy ministers. On Saturday, DA leader John Steenhuisen expressed frustration with Ramaphosa's decision to fire Andrew Whitfield, the deputy minister of trade, industry and competition, who travelled to the United States without the president's permission. While the party has chosen not to walk away from the unity government or call for a no-confidence vote at this stage, it has made clear its growing dissatisfaction. Speaking at a media briefing, Steenhuisen accused Ramaphosa of double standards. He noted that in 2020, the president gave only a reprimand and salary deduction to then-minister Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula, who used a state plane to fly an ANC delegation to Zimbabwe. 'This inconsistency shows a lack of fairness,' Steenhuisen said. Following Whitfield's removal, the DA gave Ramaphosa 48 hours to fire ministers Thembi Simelane, Nobuhle Nkabane, and deputy minister David Mahlobo over corruption allegations. The president declined, stating that he acted within his constitutional rights and would not respond to threats. Although the ultimatum was ignored, the DA confirmed it would not withdraw from the government of national unity, warning that doing so could lead to a more unstable coalition that might include the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) or uMkhonto weSizwe (MK). 'Leaving would open the door to chaos,' Steenhuisen said. 'We entered this government to put South Africa first, and we still believe our presence is critical to prevent a coalition of destruction.' Still, the DA pulled out of a planned national dialogue scheduled for August, calling it a political stunt with no real authority. The dialogue was meant to address key issues such as corruption, unemployment and gender-based violence. Steenhuisen criticised the initiative as a wasteful exercise and accused the ANC of using it to distract from its failures. 'It's an election campaign disguised as a national consultation,' he said. He also warned that the DA's patience was wearing thin. 'We will not be kicked around. If the ANC wants to remove us for standing against corruption, then so be it,' he said. While no immediate motion of no confidence will be brought against Ramaphosa, Steenhuisen confirmed that the option remains open. The DA also plans to vote against upcoming budgets for departments led by ministers under suspicion of wrongdoing. Steenhuisen vowed to push for their removal and pledged to fight the continued misuse of public funds, including the more than R700 million allocated to the national dialogue. As for Whitfield's trip to the US, Steenhuisen defended his colleague, saying it was a party-related visit funded by the DA, not the state. The DA will nominate a new deputy minister to replace Whitfield in line with the coalition agreement.'We are here to serve South Africa, but that means mutual respect and a real commitment to fighting corruption,' Steenhuisen said.

IOL News
an hour ago
- IOL News
Fikile Mbalula challenges DA to withdraw from Government of National Unity
ANC secretary general has slammed the DA saying they can leave the GNU if they wanted to. Image: Timothy Bernard / Independent Newspapers ANC Secretary General Fikile Mbalula has challenged the DA to withdraw from the Government of National Unity (GNU) following the party's recent threats to boycott the upcoming National Dialogue. This confrontation between the two parties follows hot on the heels of President Cyril Ramaphosa's recent axing of former deputy minister Andrew Whitfield, who allegedly undertook an unauthorised trip to the United States. DA leader John Steenhuisen, addressing the media on Saturday slammed Ramaphosa's decision, claiming it was indicative of President Ramaphosa's inconsistent approach to governance while also "threatening to destabilise the GNU unless all so-called delinquent ministers are removed from their positions within 48 hours. However Mbalula who was speaking during the 3rd day of the OR Tambo Regional Conference in the Eastern Cape on Sunday stated that the GNU is not a permanent feature but a temporary partnership among all the coalition parties. Mbalula stated that the ANC and its President will not be bullied and disrespected by the DA and its leaders who continuously threaten to destabilse the GNU. "When the Government of National Unity was formed with the ten political parties, it was not a permanent feature. So, we will not allow for our President to be disrespected by his deputy ministers. "Even Nelson Mandela fired his own wife. My mother Winnie Nomzamo Madikizela Mandela. Mandela took him out of the cabinet. Thabo Mbeki as president also did the same when he fired Nozizwe Madlala-Routledge. We can't then be disrespected by a small boy who is being protected by the DA. We are not in a marriage with the DA but we are in a coalition," he said. Mbalula who addressed delegates to one of the party's biggest regions in the Eastern Cape, the OR Tambo Region- which is one of the most influential ANC regions in the country said that those who had accused the ANC of selling out when it partnered with the DA in the GNU would soon realise that the ANC has an upper hand in the coalition. "They must know one thing. We are not at the mercy of the DA. We are in this coalition because we respected the outcomes of the elections and the interests of the people of South Africa. That is why we have characterised this as a strategic setback. "It is not a permanent feature. The GNU is not a melting pot. We did say that there are ten political parties in the GNU and the DA did not want this. Now, I see why they did not want this as they wanted to squeeze us and put us in a corner, but we turned the tables around and we put them in our own trap. Now they arein a deeper trap," he added.

TimesLIVE
an hour ago
- TimesLIVE
ANC slams DA's withdrawal from national dialogue
The ultimatum was issued hours after Ramaphosa sacked the DA's deputy minister of trade, industry & competition, Andrew Whitfield, for 'insubordination'. Whitfield flew to the US without Ramaphosa's permission. 'We will also actively mobilise against it to stop this obscene waste of R740m — starting with a call on civil society to join us in demanding that the national dialogue not proceed until President Ramaphosa fires ANC-corruption accused and other delinquents from the executive,' said Steenhuisen. ANC national spokesperson Mahlengi Bhengu on Sunday said it was surprising that the DA had chosen not to support the national dialogue. [The decision is] not because they oppose its principles but because a DA deputy minister was dismissed, not only for defying the president but also for violating established rules. This response speaks volumes about the DA's character, they are willing to undermine national interests in pursuit of their narrow partisan agenda,' said Bhengu. 'The ANC firmly believes that this dialogue is not merely an event. It is a critical process in pursuit of social compacting, unity, and national renewal. Ours is a nation built on dialogue, negotiation, and consensus seeking.' Bhengu said South Africa has 'time and again chosen the path of dialogue over division'. 'The ANC reiterates that the national dialogue is rooted in this proud tradition. It seeks to bring all sectors of society together to address the pressing socioeconomic challenges confronting our country, including poverty, inequality, and economic exclusion, through inclusive engagement and joint commitment to solutions,' said Bhengu. 'We have also taken note of the DA's threat not to support key budget votes, including those for the ministries of human settlements and higher education. 'Such actions are not only disruptive but undermine the very spirit and functioning of the GNU [government of national unity], to which the DA has committed itself. These ministries are critical for improving the lives of South Africans, particularly the poor and working class. 'At this juncture, it is imperative for the DA to clarify its stance: is it a genuine and principled partner in the GNU, or is it positioning itself as a quasi-opposition within the executive? South Africans deserve clarity and leadership guided by national interest, not short-term political expediency. 'The ANC remains committed to the success of the GNU and will continue to work with all willing partners in advancing the values of our constitution, deepening transformation, and building a better life for all.'