/ 22 November 2001

Marais, foster child, back with real parents

ANGELA QUINTAL, Cape Town | Thursday

WHEN the NNP’s provincial head council meets next Thursday, former Cape Town mayor Peter Marais is expected to be elected provincial leader, but it is not yet clear where he will slot in to the new co-operation deal with the ANC.

NNP leader Marthinus van Schalkwyk told reporters after a meeting with provincial leaders in Cape Town on Thursday that Marais ”is part of our future plans”.

”He, along with other leaders in our party, will play a key role in the future, and he will be appointed to a key position in the NNP.”

Which position was not yet clear as there were still ”certain party political processes” that had to be completed, Van Schalkwyk said.

Marais on Wednesday resigned as mayor and as a DA member, in a drama-packed day in which he was reinstated by a High Court decision, but then opted to stand down.

In a judgment slamming the DA for denying Marais ”the most basic of rights” when it sacked him, the Cape High Court ordered he be given back both his party membership and the mayoral chain.

An upbeat Marais told reporters on Thursday: ”I feel like a child that’s been taken out of foster care and placed back with his real parents.”

”I’m very happy to be back with the National Party and as you can see the smile is back in my face and the swing is back in my step. I again feel I’m in politics and not appearing before a court of law every step I take.”

Marais said the NNP’s confidence in him was well placed and had not cost the party a cent. He was referring to the fact that the court had ordered the DA to pay his legal costs.

”I’m just sorry for some of the councillors who will have to sacrifice some of their salaries that will have to help pay the R1,5-million costs so far.”

Marais said he would accept any post earmarked for him by the NNP.

Asked what job he had in mind for Marais, Van Schalkwyk quipped: ”One that doesn’t involve the changing of street names!”

Marais retorted: ”You see I did you a favour. If I didn’t try and change the street names, Tony would still have had a good image.”

In an attack on DA leader Tony Leon, who spearheaded the party’s action to expel him, Marais said: ”The time has come now, that you really see Tony Leon for who he really is: A chancer who tried to emulate Helen Suzman and fell far short…

”As a leader who can keep a broad church together, he’s a failure.

”You are not always going to find liberals under every rock. You are going to find Christian Democrats… African nationalists. Tony won’t be able to tolerate them or keep them together.

”We need a new type of leadership and Tony doesn’t fit into the mould, which is needed in this time of our history right now.”

On speculation that former Western Cape premier Gerald Morkel would become Cape Town’s new unicity mayor, Marais said: ”That’s the last favour the DA will do for us. It will help us considerably in 2004 (elections).”

Asked what the difference was between negotiating a co-operation deal with the Democratic Party and one with the ANC, he said: ”When you negotiate with the DP you take all your lawyers so that you are not swindled. If you negotiate with the ANC, then you negotiate with people who have South Africa’s interests at heart.”

Van Schalkwyk said details of the co-operation agreement between his party and the ANC would be made soon in a joint announcement. ”The framework is in place. There are still some problem areas that we are putting views on the table, but right from the outside both parties have been absolutely committed to make this work… I have full confidence that it will go well and we will have an agreement soon.”

Van Schalkwyk would not comment on his own future, believed to be a Cabinet post in the national government. – Sapa