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Ramaphosa not concerned by Steenhuisen's absence from National Dialogue meeting
Ramaphosa not concerned by Steenhuisen's absence from National Dialogue meeting

IOL News

time14-07-2025

  • Business
  • IOL News

Ramaphosa not concerned by Steenhuisen's absence from National Dialogue meeting

Minister of Agriculture John Steenhuisen. Image: Henk Kruger / Independent Newspapers THE Presidency has downplayed DA leader John Steenhuisen's absence from the inaugural meeting of Eminent Persons for the National Dialogue on Friday saying there was 'nothing much to read from it' considering the many other Ministerial duties that he and his other colleagues had. Steenhuisen, a member of the Inter-Ministerial Committee (IMC) appointed by Ramaphosa to prepare for the National Dialogue, had threatened to boycott the initiative over the president's decision to fire DA member Andrew Whitfield as Trade, Industry and Competition Deputy Minister. Ramaphosa held his inaugural meeting with members of the National Dialogue Eminent Persons Group at the Union Buildings on Friday. Asked about Steenhuisen's absence, Presidency spokesperson Vincent Magwenya said Steenhuisen was not the only member of the IMC who was absent from the meeting. 'Other Ministers even left the meeting earlier. So, I would not read too much into his absence considering the many other Ministerial duties that he and his other colleagues have. Besides, there was no specific contribution that was expected from IMC Ministers. The meeting was solely for the President to brief the members of the EPG and to hear their perspectives on the National Dialogue and how they view their task,' said Magwenya. Employment and Labour Minister Nomakhosazana Meth, along with her Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs Velenkosini Fiki Hlabisa counterpart, and Minister of Electricity and Energy Kgosientsho Ramokgopa, could also not attend the meeting while Social Development minister Sisisi Tolashe joined online. 'The President was delighted with the manner in which the meeting progressed. All the members of the Eminent Persons Group were highly enthused about the task ahead of guiding the National Dialogue and serving as its guarantors,' said Magwenya. GNU partner, GOOD's secretary-general Brett Herron said there should be consequences for any party that breaches the GNU Statement of Intent – which is our contract with each other,' Herron said. Policy analyst Nkosihulule Nyembezi said: 'The DA's sharpening differences are now a daily existential struggle (in the GNU) swinging between whether to submit a replacement to the dismissed deputy minister, participate in inter-ministerial meetings for the national dialogue or not. How much longer the DA can hold the line is in serious doubt as delays in deciding on such matters do not alter the general direction of travel in the GNU.'

No contracts, no clarity – almost a year of the GNU and still no ministerial scorecards
No contracts, no clarity – almost a year of the GNU and still no ministerial scorecards

Daily Maverick

time10-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Daily Maverick

No contracts, no clarity – almost a year of the GNU and still no ministerial scorecards

As the first anniversary of the Government of National Unity draws near, ministerial performance agreements have yet to materialise. South Africa's 10-party coalition turns one this month, but signed ministerial performance agreements – an important accountability tool – are still nowhere in sight. However, the Presidency says the work of government is not hampered by the absence of performance agreements. 'The process is under way and remains between the President and the concerned members of Cabinet. There are enough public accountability measures through Parliament when APPs (annual performance plans) are presented and assessed,' Presidency spokesperson Vincent Magwenya told Daily Maverick this week. In a response to Parliament in August 2024, President Cyril Ramaphosa said Cabinet ministers would only sign performance contracts once the 2024-29 Medium-Term Development Plan, which outlines the key priorities for the seventh administration, had been approved. The Medium-Term Development Plan was approved by the Cabinet in February, but ministers' performance agreements still seem some way off. President Cyril Ramaphosa appointed a bloated Cabinet and executive (32 ministers and 44 deputy ministers) to accommodate the parties in the Government of National Unity (GNU). The GNU Statement of Intent outlines the gargantuan government's agenda and strategic priorities. But, as Bhaso Ndzende, an associate professor of politics and international relations at the University of Johannesburg, wrote, exactly how each minister is to contribute to the realisation of these priorities is unclear in the absence of performance agreements. Previously, the ministerial performance agreements of the sixth administration were based on the 2019-2024 Medium-Term Strategic Framework, and ran from June 2019 to April 2024. But most of the agreements were signed only in late 2020. In his 2020 State of the Nation Address, Ramaphosa pledged to publish the agreements online, in an attempt at transparency. However, progress on those agreements was never made public. It's unclear whether the President will choose to make the performance agreements of the current administration public. Political analyst Professor Susan Booysen, says it could be a gamble so close to the 2026 local government elections. Booysen, however, said she regards ministerial performance agreements to be 'extremely important'. 'They can be a great accountability tool, not just internally for the ANC – and that would've been in times when it was just the ANC in power – but also now, in times of coalition. It would really help specify what the exact expectations are [and] what the exact permissions,' she said. Booysen said these agreements would define what was expected of each minister and what each minister was allowed to do. This is crucial because there have already been tensions and disagreements between coalition partners over responsibilities, with ministers being accused of overstepping or claiming credit for work started before their time, she said. 'We have seen that kind of acrimonious exchange happening, and a performance agreement would help spell out in exact details what it is that the expectations and requirements are,' she said. DA spokesperson Willie Aucamp told Daily Maverick that 'there [haven't] been any targets that have been set'. 'We believe, from the DA's side, that it is very important to get targets set. You must have measurables to be measured on,' he said. Aucamp said the DA supported making the contracts public, for South Africans to assess the work of the executive. 'Should the President not make [them] public, the ministers from the DA will make their targets public, as well as the achievement thereon,' he said. The Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP), Good and the Freedom Front Plus (FF Plus) told Daily Maverick they would support the publication of the performance contracts. IFP national spokesperson and Deputy Minister for Transport Mkhuleko Hlengwa described performance contracts as 'important tools to measure performances against the desired and set targets'. 'The IFP ministers and deputy ministers are visibly hard at work with or without the performance agreements because they know the commitments and the agreements they made with the voters,' he said. Good's secretary-general Brett Herron said the party 'fully [supports] meaningful performance agreements for members of the executive' and expected them to be 'concluded soon' given that the Medium-Term Development Plan had been adopted and the Budget had been tabled in Parliament. He said: 'We must remember that the GNU Cabinet was appointed in June 2024 – thus the executive has really been implementing the final few months of the previous term of office's performance plans. The delay in finalising the performance agreements is somewhat explicable in this context, though it is reasonable for the South African public to expect performance agreements to be wrapped up now and ready for signature – now that we have a governing programme and hopefully a Medium Term Budget to implement it.' However, Wouter Wessels, MP and national spokesperson for the FF Plus, said the party believed the finalising of ministerial performance agreements was taking too long. 'We do believe that performance agreements are an important component of accountability. Ministerial performance is, however, not solely dependent on such agreements… The conclusion of these agreements [is] taking much too long. We believe this should be expedited,' he told Daily Maverick. On whether to make them public, Wessels said: 'There is no need to keep such agreements secret.' 'Effective accountability can only take place in the presence of transparency,' he said. DM

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