ActionSA won't support Joburg mayor Dada Morero in no-confidence vote
ActionSA has disclosed that it will not support Joburg mayor Dada Morero, who will be facing of a motion of no confidence debate on Wednesday.
Image: Timothy Bernard / Independent Newspapers
ActionSA has revealed that it will not vote to protect City of Joburg mayor Dada Morero from a motion of no confidence filed by the Democratic Alliance (DA) over ongoing service delivery concerns, just 10 months into his term.
The party expressed disappointment over Morero's leadership, despite being in cooperation with the ANC at the metro.
Johannesburg is grappling with power outages, broken traffic lights, and deteriorating infrastructure ,water shortages, uncollected waste, potholes, rampant crime, among others.
Addressing the media ahead of Wednesday morning's council session, ActionSA national chairperson Michael Beaumont said the party had no basis to defend Morero.
'We have communicated to the ANC that we will not be voting to defend Dada Morero in today's council meeting,' Beaumont said.
'We have come to this conclusion because service delivery in Johannesburg has collapsed. I don't need to elaborate in great detail on that. Traffic lights are not working, streets are falling apart, electricity outages and water outages are more than they have ever been.'
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Beaumont also criticised Morero's response to the crisis.
'On top of that, we have a mayor who responds to this crisis with statements like, 'We'll just repair the potholes on the routes of the G20,' or 'Don't expect a lot under my mayoral team,'' Beaumont said.
'I'm afraid Johannesburg residents aspire to more than that kind of leadership, and ActionSA aspires to more than that kind of leadership.'
Morero's future hangs in the balance as he prepares to face a motion of no confidence in the Johannesburg Council.
The motion, brought by the DA, accuses Morero of failing to restore service delivery in South Africa's economic hub during his 10-month tenure.
The DA claims the city is deteriorating under his leadership.
Morero, who is also the African National Congress' (ANC) regional chairperson in Johannesburg, is not the only official facing a motion.
Council Chief Whip Sthembiso Zungu, also of the ANC, and Speaker Nobuhle Mthembu of ActionSA are also targets of no-confidence votes.
The Johannesburg City Council is made up of 270 seats.
How the motion could succeed
For the motion against Morero to succeed, the DA needs a minimum of 136 votes, however, with only 71 seats, the blue party will require support from other opposition parties. .
IOL News previously reported that in its motion, the DA accuses Morero's administration of mismanagement, operating patronage networks, and demonstrating a lack of transparency.
The party argues that under his leadership, basic services have deteriorated, communities have been neglected, and the machinery of local government has come to a standstill.
'Johannesburg deserves better,' the DA said in a statement.
The party also criticised Mthembu, claiming she has failed to fulfill her constitutional role as an impartial speaker and has instead acted as a political ally of Morero.
The DA alleges she has shielded the mayor from accountability, suppressed legitimate scrutiny, and eroded democratic processes.
'Her actions have demonstrated that she is no longer independent,' the party said.
It also accused her of protecting ineffective officials and disregarding procedural fairness.
The DA urged all councillors, regardless of party affiliation, to support the motions, saying Johannesburg residents are suffering due to poor governance.
'The DA will not stand by while Johannesburg is hijacked by narrow political interests,' the party said.
'We owe it to every resident to fight for a council that works, a mayor who leads, and a speaker who upholds the rules with fairness and impartiality.'
The ANC leads the city's government of local unity alongside ActionSA, the Economic Freedom Fighters, the Patriotic Alliance, the Inkatha Freedom Party, the African Independent Congress, Al Jama-ah, the Pan Africanist Congress and others.
simon.majadibodu@iol.co.za
IOL Politics

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