Own goals, that could hurt
the DA at the ballot box. Those the words of many senior party members in
reaction to the ongoing saga surrounding Patricia de Lille.
In a previous blog, DA Confusion,
I said you not alone if you feel confuse about the charges against the Cape
Town Mayor. Well now we know the charges [see
bullets i to v below] but developments since then
would appear as if some are jumping the gun [skip
to the conclusion if you cannot wait].
Earlier this week the Western
Cape High Court ruled Mayor Patricia De Lille be allowed to attend City caucus
meetings when matters of governance are discussed, after parties involved reach
an agreement. (see bullet d below)
This ruling comes a day after
JP Smith returned to party activities and on the same day party leader, Mmusi
Maimane, said he would the next day [Wednesday 24 January 2018] announce a
multi-disciplinary programme of action to deal with the management of averting
‘Day Zero’ [water crisis].
Maimane then launched and
said he is personally taking responsibility for #DefeatDayZero. The DA leader
who said he is taking political control also announced a Drought Crisis Team,
that notably excluded the Mayor of the first City in the world to possibly run
out of water.
Why mention this, because
hours after this launch the DA City Caucus held a special meeting discussing
the Mayor’s fate.
On Sunday councillor Mercia
Kleinsmith requested an urgent DA caucus meeting to discuss a motion of no
confidence in the Mayor.
“There are simply too many
worrying matters, actions and press releases that are in contradiction with DA
policies and values. All indications are that the party and its structures, the
public and this caucus has lost confidence in the mayor to lead this city,”
Kleinsmith motivated the motion.
A five-hour marathon meeting concluded
with 152 of the caucus members voting: with 8 abstaining, 1 spoilt ballot and
84 votes in support and 59 against it.
The City of Cape Town Council
has 231 seats. A majority of 116 votes is needed for the motion to pass.
The caucus decision now goes to
the Federal Executive for consideration but the green light might not be given
before the next council meeting on Wednesday 31 January 2018 – where an ANC sponsored
Motion of No Confidence, that was handed in last month, will be tabled.
De Lille reportedly says she is
not worried about the decision.
“The party has to decide on
that. It is not council, it was the DA’s caucus meeting. I am still the mayor
of Cape Town and I can only be removed by the full City of Cape Town. It does
not say anything.”
While councillors are
constitutionally allowed to table such a motion it is important to note DA
candidates for Mayors; deputies and speakers are selected by a selection panel
pending the approval of the FedEx, before the relevant caucus formally nominate
and vote for such candidates.
Perhaps good to remind
ourselves that in especially the last two elections DA leaders travelled across
the country selling the good governance and corruption free City of Cape Town.
“Where we govern, we govern well,” is what we were told. Ironically the person
leading the well-run City is now accused of serious allegations by the very
same council she is leading.
Patricia de Lille is also charged by her party for alleged misconduct for
Patricia de Lille is also charged by her party for alleged misconduct for
- Acting in a way that impacts negatively on the image or
performance of the party
- Failed to carry out duties and responsibilities set out by the
standards required by the statutory rules required by the public office.
- Bringing the name of the party in disrepute
- Acted in an unreasonable and detrimental manner
- Unreasonably failed to comply with or rejected decisions of the official formations of the party.
(a) A public war of
words broke out between the Mayor and a member of her mayoral committee, JP
Smith. At the centre of the spat is the disbanding of the City’s special
investigation unit – that resorted under Smith.(b) Smith also wrote
a letter to party leaders, that leaked to the media, mentioning speculation of
unauthorized security alterations at Patricia De Lille’s home.(c) An official,
Craig Kesson, implicated the mayor in serious allegations concerning two senior
staff members. Read Affidavit(d) Patricia De Lille
and JP Smith were both placed on special leave from all party activities – this
included from attending caucus meetings. Read Statement(e) Prior to a DA
federal executive meeting where Patricia De Lille’s submissions on why she
should not be fired, Federal Council Chairperson James Selfe told City
Press “it is not whether the mayor has done anything right or wrong. The issue to
decide on is whether the DA has confidence in her and her ability to run the
city and to manage the caucus”.“If a decision is made that De Lille should resign and she refuse, we will have
to instruct the DA City caucus to support a motion of no confidence,” Selfe added.
It could be all a coincidence
that the #DefeatDayZero launch, De Lille’s exclusion from it and her caucus
voting to support a motion against the mayor all happened on the same day.
What does boggle the mind –
considering everything above – is that the DA caucus might have jumped the gun and
with their vote declared Patricia de Lille guilty (of the allegations against
her) and decided on her punishment, before there has even been a judgment, let
alone a hearing.