Yesterday's debacle in Parliament left many people licking their wounds, both literally and figuratively, but four in particular will need more than band aid to repair the damage done to their reputations - Speaker Baleka Mbete, ANC Chief Whip Stone Sizani, Minister of Small Business Development Lindiwe Zulu and House Chair Cedric Frolick. They must be reflecting on what came over them during those few hours of madness and mayhem which will go down in the annals as one of the darkest moments in our new democracy.
A place for ideas, discussion and suggestions for making South Africa a better place.
Friday, 14 November 2014
ANC self destructs in Parliament. South Africa the loser. DA the sole guardian of democracy.
Today will be remembered as a dark day in South Africa's democracy. The Speaker and ANC Chief Whip cross swords. Speaker Mbete withdraws ignominiously. The House descends into chaos. Riot police enter the House and are forcibly removed by Members who refuse to be intimidated. Members are assaulted. Rules are ignored. DA Parliamentary Leader Mmusi Maimane restores order and dignity, establishing himself as Parliament's moral guardian. DA Chief Whip John Steenhuisen the bastion of order and propriety.
Tomorrow I will post a summary of events, and try to make sense of it all.
Tomorrow I will post a summary of events, and try to make sense of it all.
Sunday, 9 November 2014
Is Andile Cele South Africa's budding Ralph Lauren?
Yesterday, on my way to Soweto, I made a detour to Marshalltown in downtown Johannesburg to visit a friend of my Constituency Officer, Nomzekelo Monakali. Her friend, Andile Cele, owns a fashion store, she said, and wanted to talk to me about how to grow the business. I'm always keen to talk to budding entrepreneurs so I didn't take much persuading. What I found was a young man filled with ideas, perseverance, a determination to succeed and the makings of a fashion brand that, I believe, has the potential to make him rich and famous.
Sunday, 2 November 2014
The beauty of choral evensong
One of the highlights of my month is singing in choral evensong at St George's Church in Parktown. Evensong is peculiar to the Anglican church and is taken from the Book of Common Prayer with most of the liturgy sung rather than spoken. St George's evensong takes place on the first Sunday of each month, followed by sherry in the hall. It is a beautiful service which leaves one feeling spiritually enriched and ready for the week ahead.
Thursday, 30 October 2014
Lufhereng housing development in Soweto shrouded in controversy
Today in Parliament I called on the City of Johannesburg to come clean on the Lufhereng housing development in Ward 53, Soweto, which is shrouded in controversy.
Statement by Toby Chance, MP
30th October
2014
The City of Johannesburg has long been bragging about
its massive Lufhereng housing development in Ward 53 in the far west of Soweto.
Launched in 2008, it was projected to comprise 6 000 rental units, 6 000 bonded
units and 12 000 RDP units, as well as schools, clinics, crèches, agricultural
and commercial land.
Monday, 27 October 2014
Press statement: E-tolls killing jobs throughout Gauteng
Democratic Alliance press statement
by
Toby Chance MP
DA Shadow Minister of Small Business
Development
E-tolls killing jobs throughout Gauteng
27 October 2014
Release: immediate
Note to editors: This statement was delivered to members of the media at a
press briefing hosted by DA Shadow Minister of Small Business Development, Toby
Chance MP, DA Parliamentary Leader, Mmusi Maimane MP, DA Shadow
Minister of Transport, Manny de Freitas MP, and DA Gauteng Shadow MEC
for Roads and Transport, Neil Campbell MPL, this morning. A spreadsheet detailing the costs breakdown is
attached here.
The Democratic Alliance today
announces the initial findings of our survey on e-tolling’s impact on small
businesses.
The results confirm what the DA has
said all along – e-tolls are killing jobs and businesses in Gauteng.
Saturday, 25 October 2014
Entrepreneurs worlds apart
This opinion piece appeared in the Cape Argus on Thursday 23rd October.
Earlier this month I attended two events
which at their core aimed to achieve the same thing – entrepreneur development
and job creation, but which illustrate the huge gulf that exists in South
Africa between the worlds of the informal township entrepreneur and the
connected tech entrepreneur. They also gave me an insight into the political
and economic terrains in these two worlds, where the language used seems to
have been drawn from completely different dictionaries, written with
contrasting ideologies and politcial imperatives in mind.
The first event was the Township
Revitalisation Summit in Orlando Stadium, Soweto, convened by Gauteng Premier
David Makhura. The second was the SiMODiSA Start Up SA conference at the Cape
Town International Convention Centre. The two venues immediately set the scene
for a dichotomous relationship.
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