Civil society will work collectively to guard against the abuse of political party funding
14 July 2022
The final Zondo Commission Report has laid bare the extent to which money has been used to influence the South African state, in favour of unscrupulous private interests. The President has advised Parliament to act on the findings of the final report and the ruling party has committed to deal with its findings. However, the report has also shown that we cannot rely on the supposed will of public representatives to counter the toxic relationship between money and politics. The Report is also a call for ordinary people to ensure that public representatives are accountable. A strengthened Political Party Funding Act (PPFA) will provide us with some of the tools to do this.
State capture and the PPFA
The Report has shown how large and small amounts of money have been used to secure substantial tenders, appoint senior government officials and, ultimately, sway decisions in favour of narrow interests at the expense of the public. Ultimately, state capture cost us an estimated R50 billion, consolidated patronage networks and hollowed out our democracy.
The PPFA emerged out of a need to counter large-scale corruption during the state capture years. It, in part, attempts to prevent “state capture” by forcing political parties to disclose private donations above R100 000 and limiting the amount a single donor can donate to a party to R15 million. So far, these disclosures have given us valuable insight into who funds and influences our politics. Worryingly, in December 2021 it was revealed that the ANC intends on expanding the existing PPFA limits or scrapping these altogether. This, despite the Zondo Commission showing that state influence can be bought for way less than R100 000 and even as little R15 000.