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Date
: 07/06/2006
Source: The Presidency
Title: Pahad: Presidency Budget Vote 2006/07
Address by Minister in The Presidency Essop Pahad, on the
occasion of the Presidency Budget Vote
National Assembly,
Madame Speaker and Deputy Speaker,
Cde President,
Cde Deputy President,
Honourable Ministers and Deputy Ministers
Honourable Members
Distinguished Guests
Ladies and Gentlemen
Madame Speaker and Honourable Members,
I echo the words of our President and thank you for providing us
with the opportunity to present this Budget Vote and account to the
National Assembly about the work of The Presidency.
In 1994 we inherited a nation that was racially fractured. We
inherited a country beset with an immense legacy of material
depravation faced by the vast majority of our people. This legacy
included racialised and feminised poverty, racial segregation, a
huge unequal division of land, wealth and income based on race, and
legalised, institutionalised and systemic racial and gender
discrimination in all walks of life.
We had a dual imperative to rapidly deal with the legacy of
apartheid and transform a system regarded as a crime against
humanity into one that was democratic, socially just and
politically and economically stable. These were the objective
demands, and the objective conditions facing us in 1994.
We had to act; we had to act decisively, with alacrity, with
purpose and with vision. And we knew that this could not be
accomplished by what in the 1990s was de rigueur among those
enamoured with the Washington Consensus the neo-liberal minimalist
state characterised by privatisation, deregulation, downsizing,
delivering, decentralisation and devolution of responsibility. We
consciously eschewed the neo-liberal state in favour of the
developmental state with its responsibility of realising the
mandate given the first democratically elected government in South
Africa transformation and the progressive realisation of social
justice for all.
There is also a Constitutional imperative to transform South
Africa. In this respect Madame Speaker, the State in South Africa
has a very high obligation to improve the quality of life of all
South Africans in the context of dealing with the socio-economic
injustices of the past, while at the same time protecting
fundamental rights and freedoms as enumerated in the Bill of
Rights.
The requirement to “Improve the quality of life” means
dealing with underdevelopment, poverty, unemployment, unequal
access to education, health care etc. To remedy these inequalities
the developmental state has to act to ameliorate conditions of
disadvantage. Failure to do anything about the historical legacy
would mean that the State could, in effect, be violating the
highest law of the land.
In committing to a developmental state we were simultaneously
committing to the development of a well resourced centre capable of
leading, capable of directing and giving guidance to all spheres of
government. The centre must have sufficient capacity and be well
resourced to provide policy direction in order to achieve our broad
Constitutional and national objectives, measure the impact of
resource allocation and where necessary intervene to ensure more
efficient and effective service delivery and policy
implementation.
The developmental needs of our country are of such an order that
the provision of guidance and leadership is of paramount importance
to ensure that government is capable of decisive interventions to
ensure we improve the quality of life of our people. It is The
Presidency together with Cabinet that has overall responsibility
for co-ordinating the work of the developmental state and that has
overall responsibility for what the State has to accomplish.
So Madame Speaker, unlike those who sit languidly among the ranks
of the opposition we had to confront the reality of running a
country and make a deep and immediate impact on the dual
imperative. For our government elected on a platform of
socio-economic development not to embrace a developmental state
capable of engaging in rapid transformation would be an abdication
of our responsibility and a betrayal of the will of the people as
expressed in ever increasing majorities over successive
elections.
In a recent communication the Leader of the Opposition indicated
that in his opinion, “Whatever the gains for South Africa on
the economic front … this presidency has had an
impoverishing effect on the politics of democratic
accountability”. In what way has this government in general
and The Presidency in particular diminished democratic
accountability? By improving the socio-economic conditions of the
vast majority of our people? By upholding the rule of law and
respecting the Constitution? By Ministers appearing before
Portfolio Committees? By creating a macro-economic and political
environment of stability? Or through facilitating a highly
inclusive and participatory African Peer Review Mechanism
Process?
The Honourable Leon is being thoroughly disingenuous. It is not The
Presidency that has impoverished democracy or for that matter
called the reputation and the will of Parliament into question. It
is the Honourable Leon who recently insulted Parliament when he
questioned our transformation agenda, “Part of the unheralded
agenda of transformation” he says, “…has been
the conversion of Parliament—and other
constitutionally-mandated oversight bodies—from effective
watchdogs to supine lapdogs”. And in another instance he
served warning that “Parliament is in some danger of becoming
a shell, an empty forum”. It is one thing to call into
question the activities of The Presidency; it is another matter
entirely to insult each and every one of you present in our
National Assembly and National Council of Provinces. What
hubris!
Honourable Members, the apparent confluence of the right and some
on the left in two recent debates about centralisation and the
absence of meaningful participation demonstrate that politics some
times makes strange bedfellows indeed. The Honourable Leon is on
record as saying that “Much of what the South African
Communist Party and Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU)
have been saying about the democratic deficit in South Africa today
is what the Democratic Alliance (DA) has been saying for the past
five years.” And again, “we find ourselves in complete
agreement with the “left” faction. Not, in this case,
because they are “left” but because they are in fact
right.” Strange bedfellows indeed!
There are some even in this august body who confuse the need for a
strong interventionist developmental state with centralisation. The
centralisation-decentralisation debate is a red herring; it is the
refuge of those who lack vision, imagination and purpose. They use
it to undermine both a President who derives his power and
legitimacy from the Constitution and a responsible Presidency which
is accountable and transparent. In personalising the
centralisation-decentralisation debate they miss the key point
namely, what kind of institutional arrangements make for efficient
and effective policy development, policy implementation, service
delivery and monitoring and evaluation.
Surely, Honourable Members, no progressive person would dare
suggest that a government duly elected by the overwhelming majority
of the people ought not to fulfil the mandate given it by the
electorate. It is also useful to point out that our government
takes participatory democracy very seriously. We engage in
continuous dialogue with our people.
For us, democracy is not about asking our people to come to the
ballot box every few years; it is about consulting them through the
Izimbizo process, and through consultations. The President has also
established a number of working and advisory groups on women,
youth, higher education, big business, black business, religion,
labour and the economy. All of these initiatives are important
elements of the “People’s Contract” and
participatory democracy and serve as important feedback loops for
the President and The Presidency.
Taking the concerns of our people seriously means placing the needs
of vulnerable groups, women, children and youth and people with
disabilities at the very heart of our institutions. It is about
strengthening the work of the National Gender Machinery and the
National Machinery on Children’s Rights.
Our government locates the Office on the Rights of the Child, the
Office on the Status of Women, the Office on the Status of Disabled
People and the Youth Desk in The Presidency precisely because we
believe that mainstreaming and applying a GDCY lens can best be
accomplished and monitored in The Presidency working in close
co-operation with other national departments, with provinces and
with local municipalities. This is not about centralisation of
power and resources; it is about democracy and
accountability.
Madame Speaker, the Offices on the Status of Disabled People, the
Office on the Rights of the Child and the Office on the Status of
Women and the Youth Desk all play a vital role in four important
respects. First they engage in a very dynamic way with civil
society organisations in their respective sectors. The
communication and consultation processes that have been established
are very important for the advancement of the rights of
historically disadvantaged groups and communities, they are also
important for policy development and implementation and for service
delivery.
Second they play a critical mainstreaming role. Third they interact
with provincial and local counterparts to ensure that National
policies are translated into action in the other spheres of
government. And fourth, these three Offices and the Youth Desk
identify the challenges and gaps in policy development and
implementation and offer solutions that can be readily implemented.
In these ways the three Offices and the Youth Desk act as a vital
two way transmission belt linking government in a dynamic way with
vulnerable communities so as to ensure that the quality of life of
members of those communities improves.
All of the Programme areas have noted that they will work to:
1. strengthen the capacity of focal points in national departments
and in the other spheres of government
2. increase awareness of what gender, disability, children and
youth mainstreaming means and how it is to be accomplished
3. strengthen ties with civil society in their respective
sectors.
For the upcoming year the Office on the Status of Disabled Persons
(OSDP) has indicated that it will work diligently to:
* strengthen the disability national machinery so that it is
effective in coordinating disability programmes
* monitor more closely the implementation of a well coordinated
disability integrated policy, and measure progress of service
delivery, in for example the public transportation system, against
the disability indicators
* work on the International Convention on the Rights of People with
Disabilities.
In a similar fashion, the Office on the Status of Women notes that
in order to continue to advance women’s empowerment and
gender equality, it needs to:
* fast track the training of Public Service officials at all levels
to deliver on gender equality
* ensure the development and consolidation of an integrated
national action plan for gender
* identify ways of holding senior managers accountable for the
delivery of gender equity and equality in performance
contracts
* conduct gender-based analysis so as to ensure effective
monitoring and evaluation of the implementation of
legislation.
Madame Speaker, the Third Ordinary Session of the African
Union’s Assembly of Heads of State and Government, held in
Addis Ababa, 6 – 8 July 2004, adopted the Solemn Declaration
on Gender Equality in Africa. The Declaration seeks to
“Expand and Promote the gender parity principle that we have
adopted regarding the Commission of the African Union to all the
other organs of the African Union, including its New Partnership
for Africa’s Development (NEPAD) programme, to the Regional
Economic Communities, and to the national and local levels in
collaboration with political parties and the National parliaments
in our countries”.
The significance of this cannot be over emphasised. The challenge
for this Parliament and for all the political parties present is to
adopt and implement the principle of gender parity in elected
office well before the next general elections. I am certain in this
the year of the 50th Anniversary of the Women’s March, the
women of our country expect nothing less from us.
The core functions of The Office on the Rights of the Child (ORC)
include mainstreaming of a child centred approach; mainstreaming
capacity building in Government and monitoring and evaluation of
children’s rights delivery in Government.
The ORC identifies the need to:
1. collect comprehensive statistics on vulnerable children in our
country by conducting additional research on the socio-economic
condition of children
2. facilitate the development of a comprehensive National Policy
Framework for the Protection and Development of Vulnerable Children
in SA
3. support service delivery by departments – for example,
where child related tragedy has been experienced
4. highlight the phenomenon of child headed households which has
the potential in the long term, to undermine both the national
efforts at building social cohesion and the goal of national
prosperity
5. strengthen awareness of existing child rights policies and
resources, by among other things, developing essential material to
promote and advocate for delivery on children’s rights and
responsibilities
6. collaborate with countries in the region and internationally in
regional and global child protection and development
initiatives.
These activities and this information gathering the ORC believes
are essential for meaningful planning, programming, monitoring, and
evaluation and reporting.
June is Youth Month, and this year marks the 30th Anniversary of
the Soweto and related uprisings. The President has spoken of the
significance of June 16th in the lives of young people and in the
history of our country. Madame Speaker, we are working closely with
the National Youth Commission, the June 16th Foundation, the
Johannesburg Municipality and the Province of Gauteng to
appropriately mark the significance of the occasion.
To increase our capacity to support youth development work, we
established a Youth Desk in The Presidency last September. Working
with the National Youth Commission, the Youth Desk has helped us
elaborate youth development opportunities and programmes within
Government’s Programme of Action thus improving monitoring,
coordination and reporting. Beyond the Programme of Action, we are
now mainstreaming youth work into the Government-Wide Monitoring
and Evaluation System. This implies that trends in youth
development will be monitored as part of the mainstream and not as
a separate activity.
Youth development is high on the agenda of The Presidency. This is
demonstrated by the success we have had in facilitating the
implementation of the National Youth Service. Since the official
launch of the programme in August 2004, ten thousand youth are set
to participate in the programme so that we can make a significant
dent in the challenge of youth unemployment, and simultaneously
promote social cohesion. Let us all celebrate the spirit of Letsema
and Vuk’zenzele displayed by our young people who are seizing
the opportunities presented by democracy.
Active political participation and civic engagement are central to
the realisation of our progressive vision and agenda. We recognise
that participation in political institutions, political processes,
and civic life are critical indicators of political
inclusion.
It is reductionism in the extreme to suggest that centralisation is
the primary factor that impacts on political participation by the
masses of our people. The factors that either inhibit or enhance
political participation by people have to do with the complex
interplay between social identity, notions of citizenship, the
struggle against oppression and discrimination and the degree of
connectedness to the vision of creating a non-racial, non-sexist
democratic society.
We fully understand the important relationship between formal
political participation and participation in civic organisations.
We recognise the need for strong civics and strong community based
organisations. Social capital, information flows and political
knowledge which derive from social and organisational networks, all
play important roles in enhancing political participation and
political mobilisation.
Democracy and the very institutions of democracy, including
political parties and institutions of governance, cannot be
sustained only by political participation via a ballot cast every
four or five years. Thus we see the continual need to promote
strong organisations in civil society. But at the same time we
recognise the centrality of the developmental state as a corrective
to the excesses of the marketplace and as the legitimate repository
of the will and aspirations of the majority.
An excellent recent example of active engagement of and
participation by broad based non-governmental and community based
organisations (including business and labour) is the African Peer
Review Mechanism.
The African Peer Review Mechanism (APRM) process is about South
Africa holding itself up for review by its Peers. It is also a
mechanism for assessing what progress we as a country have made
towards gender equality, equalisation of opportunities for persons
with disabilities and the advancement of the rights of children and
youth. The APRM process is fundamentally about engagement,
inclusion and participation. It has reached into many corners of
our country. It has stimulated the minds and the passions of many
people in South Africa.
The Country Self Assessment Report which is the product of the
process to date is reflective of our commitment to genuine
dialogue, genuine listening, active engagement and inclusion and
reflects our commitment to hearing the voices of our people
articulating their concerns and their hopes. This is what
participatory democracy in the age of hope is all about. Madame
Speaker, what I am about to say may well embarrass our President,
but say it I must. Every Minister and Deputy Minister will agree
with me Cmd. President that your leadership style is based on
consensus. In cabinet meetings you listen to debate, you listen to
all sides of an argument and then you guide and lead. I want to say
from this rostrum that you are the quintessential consensual
leader.
Honourable Members, opinion polls are not the basic measure of
political legitimacy. We all know that different surveys, depending
on their samples, methodology and the rigour of their processes can
at a given moment produce different numbers when measuring the same
thing.
Our Government’s policies and actions are not based on polls
but are informed by the verdict of the electorate and by monitoring
the impact of the programme of action which the electorate has
mandated us to implement.
Polls however do contribute to our understanding of views in our
society and especially so when they show similar trends over time.
In this regard a feature common to a number of recent polls has
been the high level of popular approval for the President.
In February this year Markinor, observed that “since the
election in April 2004, the approval for President Thabo Mbeki
stayed more or less on the same level: in May 2004 and again in
November 2004, eight in every ten South Africans (80%) indicated
that they thought the President was doing his job “very
well” or “fairly well”. In November 2005, this
figure stood at 78%.”
Last week’s Research Surveys reported that the approval of
the President in metropolitan areas averaged 58% in 2004; 61% in
2005 and was 61% in April 2006.
The latest report of Institute for Democracy in South Africa
(IDASA) Afrobarometer survey conducted in January and February this
year, found a 77% approval.
Apart from the consistency of these trends, they parallel the
increasing electoral support for our party which the President
leads. Cmd. President, with you at the helm we have won the
elections of 1999, 2004 and the recent 2006 local government
elections with an ever increasing share of the popular vote.
Clearly the people of our country appreciate you, your leadership
style and the contribution our government is making to improve the
quality of their lives.
In conclusion Madame Speaker, I would like to express my deep
appreciation and gratitude for the work and commitment of the Rev
Frank Chikane, Director-General, and the staff at all levels in The
Presidency.