FREEDOM DAY
The 18th anniversary of our first universal democratic election on 27 April 1994 should be occasion for celebration. This year, the appropriate response should be introspection. At no time since 1994 has there been more reason for concern regarding the future of our constitutional democracy.
On 5 March the ANC announced its intention of dispensing with some of the elements of the historic constitutional accord on which our nonracial democracy was founded - and upon which our future national unity depends. It said that the historic constitutional agreements that we reached during the negotiations between 1990 and 1994 were no more than a ‘first transition'. It said that this first transition embodied a framework and a national consensus that may have been appropriate for political emancipation, a political transition, but has proven inadequate and inappropriate for our social and economic transformation phase."
Evidently, former President Nelson Mandela did not regard our 1996 Constitution as a transitory document. On 8 May 1996, after the adoption of the new constitution, he said that its founding principles were "immutable". He described the Constitution as "our national soul, our compact with one another as citizens, underpinned by our highest aspirations and our deepest apprehensions". He also pledged "Never and never again shall the laws of our land rend our people apart or legalise their oppression and repression."
There are also disturbing indications that the government is thinking about limiting the powers of the courts to review the constitutionality of legislation and executive conduct. On 8 July, 2011 President Zuma warned, "the powers conferred on the courts cannot be superior to the powers resulting from the political and consequently administrative mandate resulting from popular democratic elections".
He added that the government's political opponents should not be able to subvert the popularly elected government by using the courts to "co-govern the country". He later stated baldly that the government wanted to review the powers of the Constitutional Court.