Anyone who follows the media knows that journalists "hunt in packs". Once they identify their "prey" they gun them down. When a target seems mortally wounded, the "commentators" and "columnists" move in to finish them off. In journalistic cliché, it is called "speaking truth to power".
William Saunderson Meyer is this genre's poster boy. Predictably, he has turned his guns on the media's favourite "hate target" Angie Motshekga, Minister of Basic Education. His reasons seem plausible and even self-evident: the non-delivery of textbooks in Limpopo; missing agreed deadlines for publishing final norms and standards for school infrastructure; and the failure to turn around the education crisis in various provinces, particularly the Eastern Cape.
As usual, things are not as simple as they seem.
Let's start with the constitution. Education is a concurrent power, shared by national and provincial government. But when the relevant constitutional clauses are unpacked, the real power lies in the provinces. The national government is confined to establishing "norms and standards", "frameworks" or "national policies", and then ONLY under specific conditions. Provinces have extensive powers to pass and implement their own laws. And provinces actually run the school system. As Kader Asmal noted, the national department has a smaller budget and far fewer powers than any of the provinces when it comes to education.
The question is, has Angie Motshekga fulfilled her constitutional responsibilities? On the basis of the record, she has done so to a far greater degree than any of predecessors. She actually understands conditions in the average disadvantaged classroom. As a result she is trying to develop "norms, standards, policies and frameworks" that take account of reality. That on its own, is a giant leap forward for education.
So, you correctly ask, why has Minister Motshekga not finalised Norms and Standards for school infrastructure? She inherited a draft from her predecessor Naledi Pandor. So (you could argue) at least half the job was already done.