Msimanga doesn’t understand
20 January 2020
In a statement released on 16 January 2020, DA Gauteng caucus leader Solly Msimanga makes a series of wild and unsubstantiated allegations aimed at casting aspersions on the Gauteng Provincial Government for its much-needed Section 139 (1) intervention in the City of Tshwane, aimed at restoring the delivery of basic services and bringing back good governance and stability to the municipality.
In his ill-informed diatribe masquerading as a statement, Msimanga betrays a fundamental misunderstanding of the constitutional roles and responsibilities of provincial CoGTA, but this is not surprising given that a large part of the service delivery issues that we are addressing with the directives issued to the City of Tshwane, are issues that Msimanga himself failed to adequately address in his ill-fated tenure as Mayor of Tshwane and a majority of the corruption and maladministration that we are seeking to tackle in Tshwane with the directives relates to Msimanga’s tenure in office. It is all “too close to home” for him, as the cliché goes.
As to whether the said intervention is desirable or not, the Constitution is very clear and leaves little doubt. The Provincial Executive Council (EXCO) is empowered to take appropriate steps in the interest of stability and good governance. There is an extreme misinterpretation on Msimanga’s part of the EXCO’s decision to invoke section 139(1), read together with section 154 of the Constitution.
As explained in the statement we released to announce the directives, “The EXCO intervention in terms of section 139(1) of the Constitution is not open ended but must be read with section 154(1) of the Constitution as appropriate steps to address challenges in the City of Tshwane. The provisions of section 139(1) are not peremptory and when interpreted literally and in context of what appropriate steps means in tandem with the provisions of section 154 then one will relate to the type of intervention sought by the EXCO decision.