Elections. South Africa’s main opposition Democratic Alliance may consider entering a coalition with the ruling African National Congress to avoid the country being governed by more leftist parties after this year’s election. A “doomsday scenario” in which the ANC teams up with the EFF or the Jacob Zuma-backed uMkhonto weSizwe Party or MKP may force the more centrist DA to change its strategy of refusing to deal with the ANC, DA leader John Steenhuisen said in an interview. (Source)
ANC loses MK case. The ANC has lost its case in the Electoral Court seeking the deregistration of the newly launched uMkhonto weSizwe party. The court on Tuesday dismissed its case, saying the ANC has not made a case why the Jacob Zuma-led MK party should be deregistered. It found the ANC’s contention – that the Electoral Commission of SA broke the law by allowing the MK party to supplement its already rejected application – holds no water. (Source)
IEC publishes election candidate lists. The Electoral Commission this week published candidate lists for parties contesting the general elections in South Africa. In all, 14 662 candidates have been nominated to contest the 887 seats available in the National Assembly and the nine provincial legislatures. A total of 42 candidates were appearing on more than one party list implicating 39 parties. The public had until 27 March to lodge objections, with the IEC deciding on the objections on 28 March. A final list of candidates will be published on 10 April. (Source)
Expropriation Bill approved. The National Assembly approved the Expropriation Bill as amended by the National Council of Provinces with a vote of 205 in favour and 108 against. A public committee meeting was held on Tuesday to approve the changes, followed by Wednesday’s vote a day before the National Assembly rises for a constituency period ahead of elections. This approval vote marks the end of a 16-year process that began in 2008 to replace the apartheid-era expropriation law still on the statute books. (Source)
Treasury’s integrated management contract irregular. A National Treasury project worth more than R1 billion to integrate the financial management of national and provincial government has been found to be irregular by the Special Investigating Unit. The National Treasury has consistently maintained there was no corruption involved in the contract with Oracle to implement the project, which has been under planning and implementation in various forms for about 20 years. (Source)
We use cookies to collect information to store your online preference. Cookies are small pieces of information sent by a web server to a web browser which allows the server to uniquely identify the browser on each page. You can learn more about cookies and how to disable/enable them here.
We do or will use the following types of cookies on our website:
Strictly Necessary Cookies
These cookies are essential in order to enable you to move around the website and use its features. Without these cookies, services you have asked for such as remembering your login details cannot be provided.
Performance Cookies
These cookies collect anonymous information on how people use our website. For example, we use Analytics cookies to help us understand how customers arrive at our site, browse or use our site and highlight areas where we can improve areas such as navigation, experience and marketing campaigns. The data stored by these cookies never shows personal details from which your individual identity can be established.
Functionality Cookies
These cookies remember choices you make such as the country you visit our website from, language and search parameters such as size, colour or product line. These can then be used to provide you with an experience more appropriate to your selections and to make the visits more tailored and pleasant. The information these cookies collect may be anonymised and they cannot track your browsing activity on other websites.
Targeting Cookies or Advertising Cookies
These cookies collect information about your browsing habits in order to make advertising more relevant to you and your interests. They are also used to limit the number of times you see an advert as well as help measure the effectiveness of an advertising campaign. The cookies are usually placed by third party advertising networks. They remember the websites you visit and that information is shared with other parties such as advertisers.
Social Media Cookies
These cookies allow you to share what you've been doing on the website on social media such as Facebook and Twitter. These cookies are not within our control. Please refer to the respective privacy policies for how their cookies work.
If you want to delete any cookies that are already on your computer, please refer to the help and support area on your internet browser for instructions on how to do so.