DA leader John Steenhuisen says the party tried all it could to save its dethroned Joburg mayor Mpho Phalatse but “the price was too high to pay”.
Steenhuisen was explaining to the Sunday Times this weekend why the DA refused demands from the Patriotic Alliance (PA) which led to the voting out of Phalatse on Thursday.
The PA switched sides after the DA refused to commit to giving it two mayoral committee portfolios they demanded, included economic development which was previously held by the Gayton McKenzie-led party.
According to Steenhuisen, the DA tried to meet the PA halfway but its demands were unreasonable.
There was an attempt late last year to try to bring the PA back on board, but we were very sceptical
— DA leader John Steenhuisen
Dealing with the PA was tantamount to gambling, he charged, after it previously failed to stick to agreements and “walked away” from the DA-led multiparty coalition partnership last year. Instead, the PA subsequently voted with the ANC to install its mayor and Cope’s speaker.
“There was an attempt late last year to try to bring the PA back on board, [but] we were very sceptical. Nonetheless we made a compromise and began negotiations which led to the DA making six major concessions at the negotiating table while the PA made not a single concession,” said Steenhuisen.
“The price was too high to pay to bring the PA back on the terms that they wanted. There was no deal; there was a proposal which, tabled before our federal executive, it was not prepared to accept.”
Steenhuisen said his party was prepared to give the PA the two MMC positions it asked for, but not economic development which it desperately wanted. The DA move was motivated by the PA’s “past behaviour there and their stated intentions”.
ActionSA should also take part of the blame for Phalatse’s removal, Steenhuisen said. He accused it of plotting with the EFF and IFP behind the DA’s back to take over the mayorship last October. The EFF would have taken the position of speaker.
Even when ActionSA had come around, Steenhuisen said, it again fielded its own candidate when Joburg council voted for a new mayor on Friday.
“There is no bad blood between Mpho Phalatse and the DA. This is Action SA attempting to drive a wedge between Mpho and the DA. The only party that let Mpho Phalatse down were ActionSA, because all of the coalition partners agreed that they would vote for her in the first round of balloting [on Friday]. ActionSA broke away from Mpho and instead voted for Fundzi Ngobeni who they put up as their candidate, the only coalition partner to do so. They abandoned mayor Phalatse.”
Working with the EFF was never going to be on the table, Steenhuizen said, because the DA had endless difficulties in its previous relationship with the party in Joburg. He alleged that, in the 2016-21 local government term, DA mayor Herman Mashaba had “reported to the EFF caucus first before reporting to his own caucus”.
He said the DA and EFF were like water and oil because of their Ideologies. .
“So there’s not a values fit for any relationship with the EFF. We have ruled out coalitions with the EFF,” he said.






Would you like to comment on this article?
Sign up (it's quick and free) or sign in now.
Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.