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International
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PM of Western Cape quits amidst drama
By M. S. Prabhakara
CAPE TOWN, NOV. 12. Mr Gerald Morkel, Premier of the Western
Cape, has resigned. Mr Piet Meyer, who had resigned as Minister
of Transport in Mr Morkel's Cabinet, was sworn in as interim
Premier this morning. Both are from the New National Party (NNP)
component of the Democratic Alliance, though the DA itself is
fast becoming unravelled.
This is the latest stage in the ongoing drama in this Province
which began with the ousting of Mr Peter Marais last month as
Mayor of Cape Town. Mr. Marais, a colourful and controversial
leader belonging to the NNP component of the DA, had defied the
DA leader, Mr Tony Leon, though the seemingly immediate cause for
his removal was his less than honest conduct in the matter of the
renaming of two main avenues in Cape Town city centre.
In this confrontation, the Deputy Leader of the DA and leader of
the New National Party, Mr Marthinus van Schalkwyk, backed Mr
Marais and decided to make a break with the DA and seek a
political accommodation with the African National Congress.
The decision, and the ANC's positive response to these overtures,
expectedly derided by the powerful English language media, is not
as outlandish as it may seem. Admittedly, the political inheritor
of the party which implemented apartheid, the NNP has changed
significantly even as the DA has become more and more the party
of the privileged white, absorbing in the process the
unrestructured supporters of apartheid unhappy with the tentative
changes taking place in the old Nat political and ideological
mindset.
Mr. Morkel, after a series of flip-flops, finally decided to stay
with the DA. Since the majority of his own Cabinet colleagues
from the NNP component of the DA, not to speak of the members of
the NNP members, eventually abandoned him, his resignation became
inevitable. However, a new Premier has to be elected by the
Provincial Assembly within 30 days. If the Assembly fails in this
task, the Province will have fresh elections, as provided in the
provincial Constitution.
In order to avoid this eventuality, it is expected that in the
course of the next four weeks, the necessary constitutional
amendments will be put through to enable both Members of
Parliament and members of the Provincial Assemblies to cross the
floor without inviting automatic disqualification as MPs and
MPLs.
According to Mr Johnny de Langa, Chairman of Parliament's
Portfolio Committee on Justice, the amendments will ensure that
no crossing of the floor will be permitted for one year after the
elections. There are also reports that the amendments will allow
only for a short window period to enable floor crossing.
Formally and in law, the NNP and DA components of the DA retain
their original identities, and the members were elected on NNP
and DA tickets in the June 1999 elections. The DA came into being
only in June 2000, with the expectation that a united NNP-DA
would do well in the December 2000 local government elections.
An amendment to the existing unrealistic and near- tyrannical
provisions of the anti-defection provisions has for long been
felt necessary, in the interest of democracy. The so- called
anti-defection provisions of the Constitution in South Africa
spelt out first in the Interim Constitution (Schedule 2) and as
amended in the present Constitution (Annexure A) are absolute in
their stringency, showing little understanding of political
dynamics in a functioning democracy.
There is, for instance, no `escape clause', as provided in the
Indian legislation by which one-tenth of the legislative strength
of a political party can resign and cross floors without
attracting disqualification. Also, since the members are elected
on the basis of party lists and do not really represent
specifically identified constituencies in the country, a member
being expelled by his or her political party also attracts
immediate disqualification from membership of the House.
The opposition DA, both in its present reinvented form and in its
earlier form as DP, has for long called for scrapping of these
provisions on the ground that these made members virtual slaves
of party bosses.
The unspoken sub-text of such polemics is that the highly
centralised ANC held its own members in bondage, holding the
threat of disqualification against any independent initiative by
its legislators. However, DA leader, Mr. Tony Leon, has described
the current initiatives as `opportunistic'.
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Section : International Previous : Megawati Govt. in the dock over rebel leader's killing Next : Signs of agreement in fluid situation | |
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