Ramaphosa to face first motion of no confidence on 30 March

29
Ramaphosa to face first motion of no confidence on 30 March
Ramaphosa to face first motion of no confidence on 30 March

Africa-Press – South-Africa. President Cyril Ramaphosa will face his first

motion of no confidence on 30 March.His Cabinet will face a similar motion on the same

day.Both votes will be in the open, and this could

delay the process as some opposition parties are unhappy about National

Assembly Speaker Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula’s decision and could take further

steps.At the National Assembly Programming Committee’s

meeting on Thursday morning, Mapisa-Nqakula announced that both motions will be

voted on and debated on 30 March. She said voting for both motions will be in

the open.DA chief whip Natasha Mazzone said an open vote

would be “very concerning” to members who might not want to toe the

party line.She said an open vote would be tantamount to

wasting time. She suggested that Mapisa-Nqakula take a legal opinion on the

matter.Mapisa-Nqakula said she had taken a legal opinion.She said: I wouldn’t come and preside over this meeting without a legal opinion.”The environment in Parliament is not toxic at

all.”

She said South Africa had just come out of an

election, and the Zondo Commission report will be presented to Parliament in

June. She said it had been discussed openly already.She said if these things could be done, there was

no reason why there couldn’t be an open vote.She said the only issue the DA raised was that

members of the executive shouldn’t participate in the motion of no confidence

in Cabinet.”I have ruled members of the executive will

participate in the debate and the vote,” Mapisa-Nqakula said, adding that

they were members of Parliament.According to DA deputy chief whip Siviwe Gwarube,

things could be legally sound but make no sense where accountability was

concerned.Mapisa-Nqakula said: If you want to take the decision on review, you can do so.She said the rules provided for voting in a hybrid

system.

ANC chief whip Pemmy Majodina said the rules

allowed MPs to vote against their party.”I don’t understand the issue now,” she

said.Mapisa-Nqakula said she had made her ruling, and

parties were welcome to make formal submissions on the matter to her. She said

she would also ask Parliament’s legal services to provide copies of their

advice to her to the parties.Voting in the open in a virtual setting means that

chief whips will inform the table how many of their MPs are present and whether

or not they support the motion.If an MP wants to vote differently from their

party, it is then up to them to publicly say so. This is yet to happen.READ | Steenhuisen tables motion of no

confidence in Ramaphosa’s Cabinet ‘of crooks, free-loaders’In March last year, the contentious vote on Public

Protector Busisiwe Mkhwebane’s impeachment was done in the open.ANC chairperson Gwede Mantashe instructed ANC MPs

to support the DA motion. Some ANC MPs – believed to be aligned to the

so-called radical economic transformation (RET) faction – were opposed to

supporting this motion. No ANC MP voted against the motion or abstained, but a

few ANC MPs were absent.The ATM – who were not represented in Thursday’s

meeting – lodged its motion of no confidence in Ramaphosa in early 2020. It was

scheduled to be heard by the end of that year, but was delayed as the ATM

challenged then-speaker Thandi Modise’s decision to reject a secret ballot for

the vote on the motion.Mapisa-Nqakula has already indicated that the vote

on the motion will not be secret.Last month, during the State of the Nation Address

debate, DA leader John Steenhuisen announced that he had lodged a motion of no

confidence in Cabinet. If this motion should pass, Ramaphosa would not be

removed.If the ATM’s motions were to succeed, both

Ramaphosa and his Cabinet would be removed.The committee also heard that the DA’s request for

an urgent debate on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has been ceded and will be

debated on 15 March.

We want to hear your views on the news. Subscribe to News24 to be part of the

conversation in the comments section of this article.

For More News And Analysis About South-Africa Follow Africa-Press

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here