logo
Tasneem Motara appointed acting premier of Gauteng province

Tasneem Motara appointed acting premier of Gauteng province

The Citizen09-06-2025

Motara will assume all the duties, authority and obligations of the office.
MEC for Human Settlements, Tasneem Motara is not the acting Premier of Gauteng. Picture: X/@Powerfm987
Gauteng has a new premier, albeit for a short while.
Premier Panyaza Lesufi has appointed MEC for Human Settlements, Tasneem Motara, as acting premier of the Gauteng Province from Monday, 9 June to Sunday, 15 June 2025.
Motara was appointed in terms of Section 131(1)(a) and Section 13 of the constitution.
China trip
Lesufi's spokesperson, Sizwe Pamla, said the premier is undertaking a working trip to China to finalise a 'landmark agreement with the province of Hunan.'
Pamla said this is in line with the commitment he made during his 2025 State of the Province Address (Sopa).
ALSO READ: Lesufi links vehicles to crime as Gauteng launches new number plate system
'This historic deal will unlock new trade opportunities for provincial SMMEs, granting them access to Hunan's vast market of over 66 million people across 13 cities, with minimal restrictions.'
Unemployment
Pamla said the Gauteng-Hunan trade deal aligns with the Gauteng Provincial Government's (GPG) strategy to tackle unemployment, one of the key challenges identified in the G13 (Gauteng 13 priorities).
'This initiative also supports South Africa's broader National Development Plan (NDP) 2030, which emphasises Small, Medium, and Micro Enterprises (SMMEs) as a critical driver of economic growth and job creation.
'The acting premier will assume all the duties, authority, and obligations of the office to ensure the smooth running of the provincial government,' Pamla said.
Sopa
In February, during his Sopa, Lesufi detailed how the provincial government is addressing 13 major challenges affecting the province.
Lesufi emphasised that the provincial government would align with the five-year Medium-Term Development Plan (MTDP), prioritising inclusive growth, job creation, poverty reduction, and building an ethical, capable state, as outlined by President Cyril Ramaphosa.
Lesufi acknowledged that Gauteng faces 13 pressing issues, including water shortages, cable theft, non-functional traffic lights, potholes, crime, the rapid expansion of informal settlements, electricity challenges (load shedding and load reduction), gender-based violence and femicide (GBVF), drug abuse, inadequate healthcare services, a shortage of schools, failing infrastructure, deteriorating central business districts (CBDs), and unemployment.
NOW READ: Panyaza Lesufi accused of covering up alleged corruption involving hundreds of millions

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Who benefits from the musical chairs in Joburg Council?
Who benefits from the musical chairs in Joburg Council?

Mail & Guardian

timea day ago

  • Mail & Guardian

Who benefits from the musical chairs in Joburg Council?

(File photo) Wednesday's dramatic council sitting in Johannesburg offered no redemption for a city in crisis — only more politics as usual. As the rubble of coalition squabbles settled, mayor Dada Morero, of the ANC, survived a motion of no confidence. While his mediocre leadership endures, the city continues to decay beneath him. The ANC in the province hailed the outcome as a 'resounding defeat' of a 'baseless' Democratic Alliance-sponsored motion. In truth, it was a reminder that Johannesburg remains in the grip of political brinkmanship rather than principled governance. Morero, a mayor with few notable achievements and a shrinking reservoir of public trust, lives to govern another day — not because he inspired confidence, but because deals were struck and rival ambitions fell short. The vote, 144 against the motion and 75 in favour, with 43 abstentions, revealed more than just arithmetic. It showed that many parties — including ActionSA — are still playing musical chairs with governance, hoping to not be standing when the music stops ahead of the 2026 local government elections. Stuck in the middle of all of this are long-suffering Johannesburg taxpayers, who, on a daily basis, must endure undriveable roads, frequent and prolonged water outages, infrastructure collapse, crime, corruption and unemployment. Despite this, the ANC's provincial task team declared victory, touting Morero's leadership as a stabilising force and citing 'strategic infrastructure projects' and 'tackling youth unemployment' as signs of progress. The daily reality for most residents contradicts this shameful spin. The speaker of council, ActionSA's Nobuhle Mthembu, was not so fortunate. She was ousted the same day Morero stood victorious, after a motion supported by the ANC and the DA — two parties normally at odds, now temporarily aligned in expediency. Mthembu, in her response, did not hold back. Her removal, she said, had nothing to do with service delivery and everything to do with backroom deals and attempts to install more pliable figures in key positions. Indeed, the ANC has made it clear it intends to reclaim the speaker role for itself. With speculation mounting that former finance MMC Margaret Arnolds may return as speaker, leaving the city's finance portfolio open for the ANC, the party appears keen to consolidate control — and finances — before voters head to the polls in 2026. Whether this serves the people of Johannesburg is unclear. The DA cast the day as a moral victory, declaring that it had exposed a city presided over by decay. But it also found itself accused of trying to broker a deal with Al Jama-ah to restore that party's failed former mayor, Kabelo Gwamanda, in exchange for political support. The DA denied these allegations, but the charge, if true, underscores just how deeply transactional Johannesburg's politics have become. This posturing, betrayal, and denial takes place against a backdrop of basic failures. There are reports that can't be tabled because there is no speaker. Ward committees are dysfunctional. And the people, in whose name all of this is supposedly done, are left voiceless and underserved. For Johannesburg, this was not a moment of clarity. It was a reminder that even with a motion of no confidence defeated, the crisis of confidence continues.

Morero may be safe, but battle over Jozi council continues
Morero may be safe, but battle over Jozi council continues

Mail & Guardian

timea day ago

  • Mail & Guardian

Morero may be safe, but battle over Jozi council continues

Johannesburg mayor Dada Morero survived Wednesday's motion of no confidence. (X) The ANC regional task team will meet on Sunday to decide who will fill the vacant Johannesburg council speaker position, after the removal of ActionSA's A source in the regional task team said the party may consider former speaker and MMC for finance If Arnolds accepted the speaker position, this would return the crucial finance MMC portfolio to the ANC, a position it held before 'This would mean that we take Margaret back to her position — it would basically be a swop because she was doing well in that role,' the source said. It is understood that acting city manager On Wednesday, Morero survived a motion of no confidence tabled by the Democratic Alliance (DA); Mthembu was removed following a motion from Of the councillors present on Wednesday, 144 voted in favour of Morero, 75 against, and 43 abstained. For the speaker, 212 voted to remove Mthembu, and 48 opposed the motion. For the first time in council, the ANC voted with the DA to remove Mthembu, a speaker they voted for during her election. ANC council chief whip Sources said before the vote that Morero and Zungu were expected to survive, given their numbers, while Mthembu's removal was anticipated because the ANC had resolved in a meeting to vote for her removal. The regional task team, in a Tuesday meeting, declared that ActionSA had 'defined itself outside the government of local unity' that leads the Johannesburg metro. Regional task team coordinator 'The ANC then decided to vote against the ActionSA speaker, citing their failure to work with and support the coalition government on critical council matters like the budget and appointments of acting senior officials,' Manganyi explained. With the speaker position now open, minority parties are expected to make demands, but another ANC source said that door should be closed. The ANC and Economic Freedom Fighters, which lead the coalition government, have previously allowed minority parties to occupy the mayoral and speaker positions. So far, Al Jama‑ah members The ANC source said smaller parties have had sufficient opportunities to prove themselves. 'It is time for the ANC to take over the position of speaker. We will deliberate on Sunday on who must become the next speaker.' During an interview with eNCA after her removal, Mthembu described her ousting as political, and expressed disappointment that residents' needs were sidelined during the process. She blamed both the ANC and the DA for her removal and sidelining service delivery, accusing the DA of sponsoring the motion to remove her to reinstate Gwamanda as mayor. On Wednesday, the Mail & Guardian reported that the DA had allegedly promised Al Jama-ah that if it voted in favour of Wednesday's motion of no confidence to remove Morero, its candidate, Gwamanda, would again take over the position as mayor. Sources said Al Jama‑ah approached the DA, vowing to lobby other parties to vote in favour of the motion — if granted a mayoral position. According to one source: 'They then told ActionSA that they had clinched a deal with the DA, and they are lobbying other parties to vote out the mayor and vote against Morero in the motion. They met [ActionSA leader Herman] Mashaba, told him about the plan and discussed how positions would be shared.' DA Johannesburg caucus leader Belinda Kayser‑Echeozonjoku denied any talks with Al Jama‑ah, saying the DA 'has never met Al Jama‑ah and we do not discuss coalition agreements at a local level'. Mthembu said political disagreements are inevitable, but said that residents must understand why the city currently has no speaker. 'There's reports that are going to affect them, that affect service delivery that won't be tabled because council cannot continue because the Democratic Alliance wants to play cheap politics in order to fill Helen Zille as a suitable [mayoral] candidate for 2026-27 at the expense of the residents of the City of Johannesburg,' she said. 'Legislature was working, legislature was functioning, legislature went to the people, communicated with the people, our ward committees were functional. Those committees were functional. The DA ward councillors did not even attend IDP [integrated development planning] sessions and residents were complaining about that. We ran successful IDP sessions, where were they?'

Lesufi confirms more senior Gauteng officials failed lifestyle audits
Lesufi confirms more senior Gauteng officials failed lifestyle audits

The Citizen

time3 days ago

  • The Citizen

Lesufi confirms more senior Gauteng officials failed lifestyle audits

The HODs have been removed from their positions. Gauteng Premier Panyaza Lesufi has confirmed that more senior officials at his provincial government have failed lifestyle audits. Lesufi provided an update on Wednesday on the outcomes of lifestyle audits conducted on senior government officials. The premier said he received the final reports over the weekend. ALSO READ: 'Political gaslighting': Will Lesufi really fire corrupt officials? 'Of the four outstanding reports of these HODs [heads of departments], three of them again failed the audit outcome. On the basis of this, I've made a decision to immediately remove these HODs from their positions,' announced Lesufi. However, a removal may not mean they are out of a job. 'What the report says is that you're high risk where you are. So it means we must remove you and, if possible, give you responsibilities that are not high-risk. But we can't keep you where you are because of the conflict of interest and other things identified. 'It's one thing to get a report of a lifestyle outcome, it's another thing to do consequence management. You have to give the affected people their right to make presentations and proper processes. 'The DG will facilitate this process and make a public announcement on the changes to the administrative heads of departments. This reaffirms our commitment to ensure that our departments are led by people with credentials.' ALSO READ: Gauteng underspends budget but says R1.8bn not lost Last month, the Gauteng Ethics Advisory Council released the State of Integrity and Anti-Corruption Report, which revealed that 37% senior Gauteng government officials had failed their lifestyle audits. The 37% officials whose lifestyles were found to be inconsistent with the audits were given an opportunity to provide explanations. They were instructed to rectify the areas that the SIU was not satisfied with. Lesufi on Gauteng forensic reports Lesufi further announced that the province's forensic investigations had been completed. He released the reports to the public protector, the Special Investigating Unit (SIU), and the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA). The reports cover alleged cases of abuse of state resources, irregular and unauthorised expenditure, theft, unfair labour practices, ghost employees, procurement irregularities, suspected fraud, HR irregularities, assault and death threats and corruption. ALSO READ: Arrested kingpins and service delivery: Lesufi lists Gauteng successes The majority of these investigation reports came from the Department of Health, with 16 reports, followed by the Social Development and Community Safety departments, which each had seven reports. Others came from the roads and transport, treasury, and human settlements departments (two reports from each), as well as the sport, arts, culture and recreation departments (three reports), to name a few. From the 47 reports, 88 people have faced consequence management, and 55 criminal cases have been opened by the departments. So far, the provincial government has recovered R2 million of the R3.4 million that was lost due to financial misconduct in the last quarter. 'We are serious about fighting corruption, very serious. We're not going to defend anyone, and we're not going to tolerate any form of crime, fraud or corruption. 'Where we believe we need to act, we will act, especially the businesses we really believe that need to be blacklisted, because these are repeat offenders. In the absence of a register to blacklist them, it makes business difficult. Now we have taken the initiative to do that as the province.' READ NEXT: 'Asi spani': Frustrated Gauteng ANCYL in an 'abusive relationship' with Lesufi

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store