I am leaving the DA, but I am not leaving politics

4th August 2022

I am leaving the DA, but I am not leaving politics

Makashule Gana

The South African People deserve a country where all are free and secure to pursue a life of happiness and well-being. This requires bold, decisive leadership that gives power back to the people and enables them to work together in developing and implementing solutions that work for their communities.

Today I have resigned as a Member of the Democratic Alliance (DA) and as a member of the Gauteng Legislature. I am resigning to join an emerging generation of leaders and activists committed to mobilizing and organizing to return power to the people of South Africa.

I joined the DA as a 19-year-old student from the University of Limpopo in 2002. For the last 20years, I have served as an activist, member, and leader in the DA. I had the honour of serving as the DA Youth Leader, Deputy Federal Chairperson, MPL Network chairperson, and campaign manager for several elections such as Midvaal 2016. In the last 13 years, I had the honour of serving the people of South Africa through the DA as a councillor in Johannesburg, a Member of Parliament (National Assembly and National Council of Provinces), and the Gauteng Provincial Legislature.

I leave the DA with a clear conscience, no regrets, and a cemented sense of purpose and calling to serve the country. I am grateful to my colleagues – activists, members, staff, and public representatives – with whom I have shared two decades of hard yet fulfilling work. I wish them well in the future.

There is a widening trust deficit between citizens and political parties that has resulted in manyeligible voters turning down the opportunity to vote out of despair and disappointment. I do not believe that any of the existing political parties can re-orientate their politics and internal culture to regain public trust on a massive scale.

I believe that the next generation of politics in South Africa will be built on citizen political empowerment, localised organizing, and participation to elevate local issues and to grow new,younger leaders to take communities and South Africa forward. This must include the ability to choose and hold to account public representatives and government officials who are both capable and focused on restoring power to the people.

There is a new generation of leaders raising their hands to shape a new political culture that does exactly that. A person that exemplifies this new generation of leaders is Songezo Zibi, who has articulated a vision in his latest book, Manifesto: A New Vision for South Africa. This generation is rising because the country is progressing from crisis to chaos, with our current political system and leadership accelerating rather than arresting it. This new generation of leaders has resolved to create something new: a strong, national collective grounded onconstitutional and social justice values, clear priorities, leveraging the talents and capability of diverse South Africans, here and abroad.

In the next few weeks, I will be joining others in exploring the possibility of building an inclusivepolitical alternative that will take South Africa into the future. I am excited and emboldened by the possibilities of what a new generation can bring to our country. It’s time for all of us who believesomething new is required to rise collectively. We can do this.Makashule Gana,Email: makashule@gmail.com| Twitter: @makashule | Facebook: facebook.com/makashule

 

Issued by Makashule Gana