Gordhan leaves behind a trail of destruction in the SOE sector
8 March 2024
The announcement by the Minister of Public Enterprises, Pravin Gordhan, that he will be resigning from government at the end of the current administration caps a disastrous tenure that has left behind a trail of destruction in the State Owned Enterprises (SOE) sector.
Gordhan squandered the public goodwill that he had at the beginning of his tenure as the Minister of Public Enterprises by choosing to pander to the ANC and, in the process, failed to clean up the mess created by the criminal state capture project. Perhaps a serious indictment to his legacy is that he has left many SOEs in a much worse shape than he found them, with some on the verge of collapse.
When former Eskom CEO, Andre de Ruyter, exposed the existence of deep-seated corruption at Eskom perpetuated by a labyrinth of politically connected criminal networks and costing the entity R1 billion a month, Gordhan decided to close ranks with his ANC comrades. He chose to victimise de Ruyter rather than ask law enforcement agencies to investigate the merits of the corruption allegations.
Gordhan stood idly by as Eskom lurched from one crisis to another. Since his appointment to the Public Enterprises portfolio, South Africans have spent more days in the dark than at any other time since the crisis began 17 years ago. By failing to decisively deal with the load-shedding crisis, Gordhan should shoulder part of the blame for South Africa’s struggling economy, loss of jobs, closure of businesses, and attendant decline in private sector investment.