THE STATE OF PARLIAMENT
The FW de Klerk Foundation shares the concerns of participants in a recent private round-table discussion - mentioned in Business Day - on the functioning of Parliament, which was hosted by the Council for the Advancement of the South African Constitution (CASAC).
The theatrical disruption of Parliament by the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) is unacceptable - however necessary it may be to hold the President accountable over the Nkandla issue.
However, the problem goes much further than the antics of the EFF. We now have to ask to what extent Parliament is playing the central role that was envisaged for it in our constitutional system - in which it is supposed to be co-equal with the Judiciary and the Executive.
Parliament’s role is spelled out in section 42(3) of the Constitution:
“The National Assembly is elected to represent the people and to ensure government by the people under the Constitution. It does this by choosing the President, by providing a national forum for public consideration of issues, by passing legislation and by scrutinising and overseeing executive action.”