More DA trickery
"Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds. The mediocre mind is incapable of understanding the man who refuses to bow blindly to conventional prejudices and chooses instead to express his opinions courageously and honestly." - Albert Einstein
After the SONA last week, DA Parliamentary Leader, Lindiwe Mazibuko, was interviewed outside Parliament by eNCA. She was asked what she thinks of the speech, and she gave her (surprise, surprise) negative comments. At the end, she was asked if she has any positive comments on the Zuma administration. She said that she wants to congratulate Minister Aaron Motsoaledi on his leadership to drive down the HIV/AIDS infection rate. She said further: "This is a project for which the Minister has to be credited. Any minister who achieve something, does so of his or her own volition, and the President cannot be credited for it."
How foolish can one be? But I don't think foolishness has as much to do with it, as the campaign the DA is waging against President Jacob Zuma. And they would use any and all opportunities to discredit him. In the DA, nothing happens without the say-so of the Leader, Helen Zille. And any attempts to "go it alone" by a DA member, is met with opposition, and such a person would feel it. Lindiwe knows this personally, as she was quickly replaced as the DA's rising star by Mmusi Maimane, after she convened a DA black caucus last year, in support of ANC-sponsored legislation on employment equity and black economic empowerment.
In the ANC, its a different story. Let me use the HIV/AIDS campaign as an example to demonstrate. In 2007, the ANC National Conference in Polokwane decided that the policy on HIV/AIDS is wrong, and needs to be amended. This Conference did, and it also gave a mandate to the deployees in Government to effect this immediately.
When Motsoaledi became the minister of health, he took this mandate to heart, and immediately proposed a campaign to bring down the infection rate and resultant deaths from the pandemic. This proposal was discussed in Cabinet, and agreed to. It then became the policy of Government.