Unhappy endings ushered us into and out of last week. Arts columnist Kuntha Ndimande takes us through the highs and lows of popular culture this week.
EFF leader Julius Malema claims the youth at the #OccupyLuthuliHouse march are a by-product of his party’s influence.
There was unanimous agreement by the ad hoc committee tasked with appointing the next public protector that Mkhwebane was well suited for the post.
The EFF leader is playing the long game, backed up by action that shows more maturity than the ANC did this week.
The ANC has reason to be worried as opposition party leader Julius Malema and the EFF begin to show maturity and seriousness.
Its mistakes quickly forgotten, the ruling party reasons that those who didn’t vote do support the ANC after all.
Coalitions should mean that the skills and expertise of a broad spectrum of people, regardless of political affiliation, will be called upon.
The EFF’s commander-in-chief made it clear that neutrality is not an option and will thus back the DA in the major hung metros.
The EFF leader said they would provide jobs and good service delivery as he introduced the party’s new councillor in Marikana.
Speculation swirled around Malema after he dropped extra kilos, showing dangerous associations between being thin and being sick still plague Africa.
Tweets shouldn’t fuel HIV-related stigma. The Mail and Guardian’s tweets did. Here’s why.
Possible municipal coalition are slowly taking shape, with Tshwane and Johannesburg the most contentious.
Economic Freedom Fighters commander-in-chief says news channel ‘promotes racketeering and fraud’.
Malema was greeted by cheering crowds inside the stadium comprising of both youth and the elderly.
“Stop loving T-shirts more than your own future, your children’s future and the country’s future. They have given you T-shirts from 1994 until now."
President Jacob Zuma will only be ‘forgiven’ for using taxpayers’ money on Nkandla renovations if he recovers ‘stolen’ land, says Julius Malema.
Parliament’s inability to differentiate between itself, the state and the ruling party is shutting down free speech.
ANC chief whip Jackson Mthembu claimed that EFF leader Julius Malema’s bodyguards breached the security of Parliament, putting MPs’ lives at risk.
While electioneering in Cape Town over the weekend, EFF leader Julius Malema encouraged protesters to burn down ANC buildings instead of schools.
Readers write in about defence systems, nuclear power, and Julius Malema.
ANC chief whip Jackson Mthembu warned Julius Malema that, like the right-wing group that tried to overthrow government, prison would be his ‘home’.
This follows EFF leader Julius Malema’s vow in March this year that he would not allow the president to speak in Parliament again.
Keen to keep the focus on its election manifesto, the EFF has labelled the ANC’s treason charges against Julius Malema ‘bizarre’.
Police Minister decries Malema’s comment on Al Jazeera at the weekend that the South African government would be removed by the “barrel of a gun”.
There are some success stories, but South Africa’s education system is still a failure for far too many people, argues Tinyiko Maluleke.
Raging political battles have spilled over into interviews for positions on the Bench.
The National Assembly motion to remove Jacob Zuma as president was lost on Tuesday evening, with 233 votes against his impeachment.
Opposition MPs demanded that Parliamentary Speaker Baleke Mbete recuse herself as they said she was implicated in the Concourt’s Nkandla judgment.
Pride, greed, lust, envy, gluttony, wrath and sloth – the feathers in our president’s cap.
Speaking at his Unisa graduation ceremony on Wednesday, EFF leader Julius Malema predicted the Constitutional Court would rule against the president.
Those who live in dictatorships watched in awe as Julius Malema led a campaign to test the ANC’s commitment to the rule of law, writes Bheki Makhubu.
Insults and an EFF walkout aside, it was strictly business for President Jacob Zuma and Co during the Sona debate.