Date: 18/03/2010 Source: The African National Congress Title: ANC: Radebe: Speech by the Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development, in the debate on the vote of no confidence in President Jacob Zuma, Parliament
Thank You Mr Speaker.
From the onset, let me restate the historical fact that the real Congress of the people is the African National Congress. As a majority party, it is therefore through the African National Congress that the people will speak of their representation in the Executive.
At our 52nd Conference in Polokwane in December 2007, delegates overwhelmingly elected Mr Jacob Zuma as President of the African National Congress. We did not release any white smoke into the Limpopo University chimneys because we were clear in our minds that we had not elected a Pope, but a human being who has human strengths and human frailties like all of us.
On 22nd April 2009, 11 650 748 voters, what we consider to be a broad spectrum of South Africans, and nearly 70% of the electorate, voted for the African National Congress, led by President Zuma to be the Government of South Africa. One million more people voted for the African National Congress in 2009 than in 2004.Today, the arrogance of 30 people in this House, is trying to tell us that those millions of people were wrong. The collective minds of these millions of people are convinced that our movement and its President are fit and proper to run this country.
This motion goes contrary to the recent findings of the IPSOS Markinor survey of February 2010, which has the following to say, and I quote:
"At the start of 2010, President Zuma is in an enviable position in terms of his public rating. He begins the year with 77% of the population agreeing that he is doing his job fairly well, or very well. This is the highest rating for a President since May 2006.." (Unquote)
This means that the President of the African National Congress at 77% is more popular than the African National Congress at 70%.
We have never wavered from our understanding that each President of the African National Congress, from Reverend John Langalibalele Dube to Jacob Gedleyihlekisa Zuma, would come and go, but each one of them would leave an indelible mark in the character of our movement, responding to the particular challenges of their tenure and the challenges of the stage of our revolution.
I am therefore surprised, Mr Speaker, that we are gathered here today to entertain the views of a few, who are driven by motives other than those of honesty, particularly with regards to majority rule. Honourable Members, I venture to say that had we been alive to the current challenges of our communities, and were it not for the permissiveness of our constitutional democracy, for which we, the African National Congress take full credit, such a motion would not have been tabled. As we deliberate this issue, we are inadvertently being made partners in throwing a lifeline to an entity that is drowning under the inconsistencies of its own power hunger. As I speak, Honourable Members, I do not know to whom, among the three, my eyes should be fixed, because my action may be misunderstood to mean my endorsement of the one I am looking at. This is the gravity of this leadership squabble I am talking about.
This house is being roped in to be fellow sojourners in a journey of a disgruntled few who have not come to terms with the realities of democratic politics of winning OR and losing.
I rise, Mr Speaker, not because I am a Member of Parliament who is expected to defend the integrity of the President of the African National Congress. I rise because many of us are angry that the proposers have done so knowing very well that their motion will not see the light of day but they will get their cheap publicity all the same. If we as Honourable members of this august body do not rise, this new tendency to grandstand will continue unabated while the mockery continues to erode the credibility of our democratic institutions. On two occasions we have seen the same group of people using Parliament for cheap publicity? Firstly, when they proposed a candidate for contesting the Presidency of the Republic, they knew very well that it would be easier to win the Powerball and Lotto than the Presidency.
* Secondly, when they tried to precipitate a crisis by walking out of these Chambers last month because they disagreed with the ruling of the Deputy Speaker, they may have got their sixpence worth of media spotlight but the wheels of democracy continued, thanks to the political parties that stayed behind and fulfilled the mandate which they have been given by the electorate.
The track record of COPE seems to border on anarchy from Polokwane, to their internal problems to the current motion. COPE has displayed characteristics of being a party of failures. For instance:
* COPE failed to launch itself as a Party in the hastily organizedmeeting in Bloemfontein in December 2008;
* It cannot bring unity even among the arbitrarily self-appointed leadership;
* It deceived the electorate by promising a manifesto but they did not have a policy upon which to base their Manifesto on;
* The party deceived the electorate by promising them to be the next Government but later changed tune by claiming they will be the next official opposition;
* They claimed they will be an effective opposition but the Deputy leader is never seen in the corridors of Parliament.
* South Africans have expressed a vote of no confidence in them.
Honourable members, I say this because this group has on two occasions, in Polokwane and in the April 2009 national general elections, dismally failed to get political recognition through democratic processes and are now using this House to win what they failed to win democratically.
I have observed Mr Speaker that the timing of this motion is not fortuitous. There are three clear indications that the timing was carefully considered:
* Misled again by some sections of the media that hyped their earlier existence, the Congress of the People labours under an illusion that the ANC-led alliance is about to unravel. Many of our detractors have, since time immemorial, wished for this unraveling but it has not come and is not about to come any time soon.
* Mr Speaker, we have noted that after trying to postpone the inevitability of an elective conference since the 16th December 2008, the Congress of the People, has finally succumbed to the pressures of its youth wing to hold one in May 2010. There is a direct relationship between the tabling of today's motion and the jostling for leadership positions for this elective Conference.
* After a long courtship, there is now a mooted multi-matrimonial relationship amongst some opposition parties. Having been made aware that they are not abrasive and robust enough in parliamentary questions and motions, COPE now seeks to impress with a new make up.
It is my considered view that the tabling of this motion today will not stem the hemorrhaging of COPE's trumped up membership which, though unsubstantiated and undocumented, was standing at 428 000 in December 2008.
Let me highlight just a few examples why we in the African National Congress and the majority of South Africans, think that the President of the Republic is a fit and proper person to lead this country, and that the motion of no confidence is a spurious allegation.
* The President facilitate the end to the Burundian conflict after taking over as facilitator from our iconic former President Mandela who in turn had taken over from the great late President Julius Nyerere of Tanzania.
* On 12 November 2009, the African Consciousness Leadership Awards awarded President Jacob Zuma the title, the "Best African President" for his role in our country's liberation and his contributions to the African continent.
* Our country has, regrettably, been involved in service delivery protests in certain areas. While we agree that this is a matter which all of us as Parliament and as government should be seized witcannot overlook the fact that these communities almost always call for the President Zuma to come and listen to their complaints.
* Two weeks ago, Her Majesty the Queen of Great Britain invited our President on a state visit as one of the two world leaders who are invited annually by her. Except for one racist tabloid indiscretion of one Stephen Robinson of the British Daily Mail among many media in the United Kingdom, this state visit was among the most successful State visits ever undertaken by a South African President.
* The President has called for a debate on a moral code for South Africa. We call on all South Africans of goodwill to take part in this debate. But we call more on those who had climbed the soap boxes of morality to join this debate with an intention of making South Africa a better for our children to grow.
* In December last year, at the Copenhagen Climate Change Conference, our President, together with the leaders of the United States, China, Brazil and India, saved the day by providing a Work-in-Progress, broke the impasse by drafting the Copenhagen Accord. Admittedly it was not what we had hoped for, but this document, which has already been endorsed by the African Union, forms the basis for further climate discussions in Mexico towards the end of this year.
* As I speak, today, the 18th of March 2010, the President is facilitating the Global Political Agreement in Zimbabwe, and on his shoulders rests the hopes and aspirations of all Zimbwabweans.
* Government has been restructured so that Ministers are monitored on the basis of Outcomes-Based Performance Agreements.
Allow me Mr Speaker, as I conclude, to borrow words of wisdom from the Holy Scriptures and I quote:
Do not judge, so that you may not be judged. For with the judgment you make you will be judged, and the measure you give will be the measure you get. Why do you see the speck in your neighbor's eye, but do not notice the log in your own eye? Or how can you say to your neighbour, ‘Let me take the speck out of your eye,' while the log is in your own eye? You hypocrite, first take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your neighbour's eye." (Matthew 7:1-5, NRSV) " [Unquote]
I hope I will be understood not to have abused the wise words of the Holy Scriptures to bolster my defence of the President, but to highlight the fact that from those who counsel us on the Good Book, much more is expected.
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