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Opposition parties have united in recent weeks in calling for President Jacob Zuma to be removed, but appear divided on what should happen if the motion of no confidence against him succeeds.
The Democratic Alliance in Parliament on Tuesday said it would be better for the country to hold early elections if Zuma is voted out of power during the motion on August 8.
DA chief whip John Steenhuisen said that party leader Mmusi Maimane had been on record that the DA would prefer early elections if Zuma and his Cabinet are ousted.
“What South Africa has is not [just] a Jacob Zuma problem, it is an ANC problem,” Steenhuisen said quoting Maimane.
“It would be better for the country to go to the polls and elect a new government through fresh elections [were the motion successful].”
However, the Economic Freedom Fighters and United Democratic Movement disagree on holding early elections, with some party insiders arguing it “complicates and antagonises” ANC MP’s considering supporting the motion.
News24 understands that opposition party leaders have been holding talks with ANC MPs, promising them that the motion is not an attempt to remove the ANC as a governing party, only Zuma.
One source said some of the MPs wanted reassurance that the vote of no confidence was not an attempt at “regime change”, as a condition for supporting the opposition’s motion.
Opposition party leaders have been wooing ANC MP’s to support the motion. They need at least 50 votes from ANC MPs for the motion to pass.
EFF spokesperson Mbuyiseni Ndlozi said that holding early elections means not only voting for a new president, but also replacing the current Parliament.
“The DA is yet again proving its incapacity to appreciate what our Constitution is about,” Ndlozi told News24 on Tuesday.
“The removal of a president is no constitutional basis for the dissolution of Parliament. So, therefore, they are being constitutionally unintelligent.”
Ndlozi said the point of the motion is to prove that South Africa’s democracy can move on without individuals who have been corrupted as heads of government.
“The ANC won the 2014 elections. That’s the constitutional definition of who won. It’s a political party that wins, so they have the majority.”
MPs should, therefore, vote in a new president from the current fifth Parliament, he said.
The EFF has already indicated that it is ready to interdict the August 8 debate if Mbete announces an open motion of no confidence, and would seek an urgent interdict against that motion on the basis that it must be via secret ballot.
‘Impractical, IEC not ready’
UDM leader Bantu Holomisa said it would simply be impractical to hold early elections if Zuma goes.
“There’s no need for fresh elections. The Independent Electoral Commission is not ready for that. They are still battling with addresses for voter registration. They have said they also need R300m.
“They depend on the ANC government to get that R300m, so that would just be an exercise in futility. It won’t work.”
It would have worked if the IEC systems were ready and they had a budget, he said.
Holomisa also said that Zuma should be removed, but they were not in the game of changing the regime just yet.
“We said Zuma must go, so obviously the ANC will continue to 2019. We are not contesting that.
“All we are interested in is for Zuma to leave because he has violated the oath of office.”
Ousting Zuma was Parliament and democracy’s turn to test itself going forward, and allow the current fifth Parliament to finish its mandate strongly, he said.
‘SA ripe and ready for change’
Steenhuisen was confident that regardless of what happens next week, the opposition has been brought closer together by the ANC.
“I think the opposition has never been more united. The one thing the ANC has been successful in doing is uniting the opposition and civil society against them.
“I think South Africa is ripe and ready for change, no matter what the outcome of next week’s debate.
“Post-2019, there will be a coalition in South Africa; it will be an ANC-led coalition or a DA-led coalition.”
He said the opposition parties had shown they could achieve much by working together, and by advancing core principles, despite differing ideologies.
According to the Constitution, the current President can only dissolve the National Assembly before the expiry of its term if:
– the Assembly has adopted a resolution to dissolve by a majority vote, and three years have passed since the Assembly was elected.
An acting president can only dissolve the National Assembly if:
– there is a vacancy in the office of President, and the Assembly fails to elect a new President within 30 days after the vacancy occurred. – News24