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EFF will be new government in Tshwane metro come June – Malema

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EFF leader Julius Malema addressing businesspeople at a gala dinner in Tshwane ahead of the party’s manifesto launch as the country gears up for the 2019 elections. Picture: Supplied
EFF leader Julius Malema addressing businesspeople at a gala dinner in Tshwane ahead of the party’s manifesto launch as the country gears up for the 2019 elections. Picture: Supplied

Julius Malema dropped a bombshell on Friday night saying the EFF will be the new government in Tshwane metro, come June.

Speaking at the EFF gala dinner in the capital city, Pretoria, Malema told guests that the EFF will also have MMCs in both Tshwane and Johannesburg councils.

“We want to take some power. We have been training for too long now. We will be mayors and MMCs. In Johannesburg you will get EFF MMCs.”

He said the EFF had men and women educated enough and committed to serve. “We are not worried about who becomes the mayor, but the city manager needs to be someone who is not easily corruptible and committed to deliver services.

“We do not even mind even if it is not an EFF cadre,” he said.

Malema said the EFF would rather fail after trying “and if we fail we will try again.”

He said the DA mayor in Johannesburg Herman Mashaba was safe “and even if the DA fires him they will personally give him a red cap.”

On the DA’s outgoing Tshwane mayor Solly Msimanga, Malema said it was good that he left because he had created a mess.

He said that Msimanga was the city manager Mooketsi Mosola was a scapegoat. “We do not want a situation where politicians use administrators as scapegoats.”

Last week, City Press reported that the EFF was unhappy with its relationship with the DA and that a split could not be ruled out.

An improved electoral performance would not only strengthen the EFF’s bargaining hand, but it would also resuscitate its long-held ambition to become a governing party – and taking over either of the two metros would be considered a major feat.

On Friday Malema identified Tshwane as the metro the EFF intended to govern. His praising of Mashaba could be an indicator that the EFF was still open to working with the DA, provided that an agreement is reached on Tshwane.

Last week an irate Malema told the media that the DA had crossed the line in its posture against the EFF with regard to the criminal case it had lodged against the party for its alleged involvement in the looting of VBS Mutual Bank, blaming the DA’s stance on “white arrogance”.

He said the DA could have had the courtesy to solicit the views of the party keeping it in power in the country’s richest metros, but instead, it took a position “and they just call us names”.

Malema was particularly peeved about a campaign by the DA in which it used SMS messages, posters and telephone voice prompts to spread accusations that the EFF had stolen VBS money that had belonged mainly to poor people.

“The people making it possible for you to have power, you must have some decency when you deal with them,” said Malema. He said it was an insult for the DA to label the EFF as corrupt and compare the party to the ANC.

“And then, after putting up those posters, they are going to come to us and say: ‘Let us vote together in Tshwane municipality.’ After insulting us like that? “Then you South Africans say that the EFF must vote with the DA, otherwise they are bringing the ANC through the back door ... We cannot be insulted like that.”

He said that the DA would not defeat the ANC in Gauteng and govern the province unless the EFF played a role.

But the DA did not back down on its claims that the EFF is just as corrupt as the ANC and that both parties should be stopped.

DA spokesperson Solly Malatsi said: “The ANC and the EFF are in a de facto coalition of corruption nationally.”

He went on to say that the ANC had Bosasagate – in reference to revelations of corruption by politicians aligned with the governing party in the ongoing state capture commission of inquiry.

He added that the EFF was deep in the VBS mess, in which up to R2 billion of the bank’s money was allegedly looted – leading to the winding down of VBS as well as to several municipalities standing to lose millions of funds that were irregularly invested with the bank.

Malatsi said the allegations showed that “these parties put themselves first and the people last”.

The DA was “focused on becoming the biggest party in Gauteng to keep corruption out of Gauteng, create fair access to jobs, fix the police service and speed up the delivery of basic services,” he said.

Malatsi accused the EFF of not being committed to building a united South Africa, fighting corruption and putting the people first.

“They do not treat the future of our country with decency and seem intent on sowing division rather than unifying South Africa.”

Malatsi said the DA was “the only party that is big enough to stop the ANC and EFF coalition of corruption and build a better future for our country that keeps corruption out, creates jobs and keeps our communities safe”.

Responding to Malema’s use of the term “white arrogance”, Malatsi said that the EFF itself was arrogant to think that the DA had no options without it.

But Malema hit back, saying the DA’s attitude was “no problem. They must enjoy it while it lasts because there are going to be problems, and they must know that.”

Asked whether the EFF had resolved to part ways with the DA and whether a working relationship with the ANC was on the cards, EFF deputy president Floyd Shivambu said the party would not participate in the selection of the mayor in Tshwane, following Msimanga’s resignation.

“That is final. The rest of the things are just figments of political imaginations,” said Shivambu.

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