Democratic Alliance insiders have long identified a serious threat to our project: the proliferation of DA members whose own values are fundamentally at odds with the party.
We must be wary of those who see the DA merely as a platform for publicity or a path to power. There is no point winning elections if we cannot implement a programme of action grounded in our vision of an open, opportunity society for all.
At the same time we must be aware of those who use the spectre of ‘illiberal tendencies' to shut down legitimate debate and discredit people. Such bullying tactics are the hallmark of authoritarianism, not liberalism.
Alan Paton once described liberalism as "a generosity of spirit, a tolerance of others, an attempt to comprehend otherness..." His point was that, besides a commitment to the rule of law and individual freedom, liberalism is about empathy, mutual respect and the ability to see other people's points of view.
For liberals, this means dispensing with the dogma and grappling with some of the great questions we face, such as: what does it mean to be a liberal in Africa? Is there a place for notions of community within the liberal framework? Are liberalism and religion compatible? The list is endless.
The DA's National Spokesperson Mmusi Maimane attempted to tackle one such question in an opinion piece published in the Sunday Times this week. In it, he interrogated the concept of ‘Africanness' and its place in our democratic discourse following Jackson Mthembu's attack on Lindiwe Mazibuko.