THE Economic Freedom Fighters were in civvies for the debate on President Jacob Zuma's State of the Nation Address and, for a short while, it seemed the unthinkable was happening, that the grandstanding in red workers' apparel was a thing of the past. But no. The Commander in Chief, Julius Malema, made his entrance in the by-now familiar spotless overalls and shiny black gumboots with his red hard hat at a rakish angle.
It was his big day. His first address to the House - all 15 minutes of it - and he appeared to be in good cheer. Up in the press gallery it did look as if his overalls had shrunk a little. Or were a size too small in the gut department. Every time he raised his arm to greet a colleague, the overalls would rise a a wee bit uncomfortably into wedgie territory, as the schoolboys would have it, and there would be a little bit of fiddling to rearrange things.
No matter. That wasn't stopping the CIC. Malema was here to kick a bit of life into the debate, and given the plodding start to the afternoon's business from Jeff Radebe, the Minister in the Presidency, the debate certainly needed a kick or two in the wedgie territory.
Radebe had the unenviable task of providing a recap of Zuma's tired and not very inspiring address of the night before. He chose to leave nothing out and so Zuma's 75-minute mumblethon was crammed into a 20-minute Radebe speedfest. He was like a machine gun. The National Assembly's microphones didn't stand a chance. Radebe's "P"s tended to make a dreadful popping sound over the PA system - and there were a lot of them: ". . . Performance . . . President . . . dePartments . . . imPlementation Plan . . . develoPmental Plan . . . People's Plan . . . Parliamentary Procedure. . ."
Pop, pop, pop went the pounding on the ears.
Radebe was followed by the leader of the opposition, the DA's Mmusi Maimane, who was also making his debut address to parliament. It was a polished performance and provided the afternoon's first real entertainment with a dig at both the government and the Effniks.