A torrent of words fails to pass the EWC Bill, but the threat remains
8 December 2021
Words alone don’t make good national policy, whether in the form of badly-drafted legislation that gives immense power to officials, or the torrent of words spoken in Parliament as the Government side emptied its rhetorical barrel in support of a law that would open the door to expropriation of any private property without compensation, not only land.
That this amendment to the Constitution did not pass is thanks to two things. The first was that 30 ANC MPs did not turn up. The second was that everyone other than the Government MPS voted against it.
Everyone in South Africa with a modicum of economic understanding knows the key role that private ownership of land (improved or not) is the bedrock on which all modern economies rest. The substantial home-owning, mortgage-paying Black middle-class knows this. Only the ideologically–obsessed and the ignorant believe otherwise.
This latter thinking is understandable but is essentially romantic. It looks back to the past through rose-tinted spectacles, the view producing rhetoric to match.