EFF DAY OF RECONCILIATION

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EFF DAY OF RECONCILIATION 

The Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) notes, on this so-called Day of Reconciliation, that there is nothing to reconcile in a society where justice has been deliberately postponed, truth selectively acknowledged, and the beneficiaries of apartheid continue to enjoy stolen wealth and land without consequence. 

Over three decades into democracy, the wounds of apartheid remain open because the crimes of apartheid were never decisively confronted. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) did not deliver justice; it delivered enforced forgiveness. Apartheid criminals were allowed to walk free through amnesty, while those who never applied for amnesty were shielded by a state that lacked the political will to prosecute them. 

Victims were asked to forgive without justice, to heal without truth, and instead of reparations they live with lifelong trauma, loss, and dispossession. 

Today, this failure continues in real time. The recent judicial commission of inquiry established to investigate the suppression and delay of apartheid-era prosecutions has itself been delayed and extended, without hearing substantive evidence for months. This is a continuation of the same pattern that has defined post-apartheid South Africa: endless processes, extensions, and excuses, while victims die without seeing justice and perpetrators escape accountability through time and bureaucracy. 

Families of victims such as the Cradock Four, the COSAS Four, Nokuthula Simelane, and many others are still fighting for justice. These families have had to personally fight for these cases to be reopened because the ANC-led government failed to act decisively against known killers, commanders, and political leaders of the apartheid security machinery. 

These ongoing legal struggles are a clear indictment of the reconciliation project, which continues to protect perpetrators and abandon victims.  

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President Cyril Ramaphosa arriving at Ncome Museum, Nquthu Local Municipality

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President Cyril Ramaphosa arriving at Ncome Museum, Nquthu Local Municipality

CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE_EDITOR©®™




This year’s theme is enshrined on the call for South Africans to deepen the commitment to unity, healing, forgiveness and nation-building for shared future.

Hosting the 2025 programme at Ncome reaffirms this commitment and invites the nation to engage honestly with its complex past while advancing a future rooted in inclusion, understanding and unity.

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R688MILLION FUNDING ONLINE MEDIA IN SOUTH AFRICA

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CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE_EDITOR©®™

R688MILLION FUNDING ONLINE MEDIA IN SOUTH AFRICA 

MEDIA AND DIGITAL PLATFORMS MARKET INQUIRY RELEASES FINAL REPORT

The Media and Digital Platforms Market Inquiry (“MDPMI” or “Inquiry”) initiated under section
43B(1)(a) of the Competition Act, released its Final Report. The final report is a culmination of 24 months of extensive evidence gathering, five rounds of information requests, public and in-camera hearings, expert submissions, consultations with industry stakeholders, a consumer survey, a focus group, and a
provisional report process that enabled broader public input from media publishers, broadcasters, the digital platforms themselves, and academia.

The final report underscores how news media is essential for democracy, serving as the cornerstone of public accountability and informed citizens. Yet, the global transition to digital platforms has severely undermined traditional revenue models and has eroded the financial positions of news media. In South Africa, declining advertising income and the limited ability of audiences to pay for subscriptions have led to shrinking newsrooms, closed bureaus, and constrained reporting capacity. Meanwhile, digital platforms exacerbate these pressures by capturing audiences and monetisation opportunities that traditionally sustained news outlets.

The Inquiry found that major global platforms (Google, Meta, Microsoft, TikTok, X and AI companies such as OpenAI) dominate key gateways through which South Africans access information, namely search, social media, and AI-powered tools. In search, Google maintains a dominant position, where news represents.      5-10% of queries and drives user engagement that is monetised through commercial advertising. Google does however not compensate South African media for the news content it displays
or summarises. 

Referral traffic to media websites has declined sharply as users increasingly consume AI-
generated summaries or remain on Google’s own platforms. Furthermore, Google’s algorithmic structure tends to favour large foreign outlets over local or vernacular media, deepening inequality in content visibility
and advertising reach. Microsoft exhibits a similar foreign bias through its MSN service, which contracts relatively few South African publishers.

In terms of social media, platforms such as Meta (Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp), YouTube, X and TikTok play a massive role in distributing news to South Africans, particularly within community and vernacular audiences. While these platforms gain immense engagement value from news, few South African outlets are accredited or technically enabled to monetise their content on the platforms. Both Meta and X have deprioritised posts containing news links, substantially reducing referral traffic to publishers’
sites. 

The SABC relies heavily on YouTube for content distribution but earns minimal revenue-share compensation. Social media algorithms also foster the spread of misinformation and disinformation by promoting sensationalist material over credible sources, imposing social costs that the media must absorb in combating fake news.

The Inquiry also found that AI chatbots and large language models have scraped online news content without compensation, using it to train AI systems and generate responses to user queries. Although news represents a small portion of total training data, this practice raises significant questions about the future
value of original journalism. While major AI companies now offer websites the ability to opt out of scraping, small and community media often lack the technical expertise to exercise these options. 

The Inquiry observed that South Africa’s fragmented and resource-constrained media houses are too small individually to attract content licensing deals, but collectively they could offer significant value. At the same time, AItechnologies themselves hold potential for improving newsroom efficiency, enhancing audience engagement, and delivering innovative news formats, provided the media can access affordable tools and training.

In AdTech, Google’s dominance across the AdTech stack has entrenched dependency and raised costsfor media, with its bundled systems giving preferential treatment to its own exchange. While South Africa cannot resolve these global distortions alone, aligning with international regulatory and legal efforts could
help restore fairness. AI and digital platforms also offer opportunities for innovation, but only if local media can collectively bargain, build technical capacity, and access fair compensation for their content. Sustained
collaboration, investment, and policy support remain vital to ensure a diverse, credible, and sustainable South African media ecosystem.

After extensive engagement and two months of negotiations with global platforms and stakeholders, the Competition Commission has finalised a comprehensive package of remedies designed to restore fairness, transparency, and sustainability in South Africa’s media ecosystem. 

Most major platforms have
agreed on the remedies and will implement them immediately post-launch. Central to these outcomes is a R688 million Media Support Package agreed with Google and YouTube, which will fund national, community, and vernacular media through a combination of content licensing, innovation grants, and
capacity-building initiatives. This includes support for newsroom innovation, contributions to the Digital News Transformation Fund, and funding for vernacular-language training through the Media Development & Diversity Agency (MDDA). The vernacular training with MDDA is one of the various initiatives under the
package. 

Google will also introduce new user tools to prioritise local news sources, provide technical
assistance to improve website performance, share enhanced audience data, and establish an African News Innovation Forum. Microsoft, in turn, will extend its MSN news contracts to include five additional national publishers.

In the social media space, Meta will create a Media Liaison Office in South Africa and expand monetisation access through workshops, ad credits, and the removal of follower thresholds. YouTube will offer
automatic access for all South African media to its Partner Programme and support the SABC with direct ad sales and archive digitisation. TikTok will roll out its Publisher Support Suite in South Africa, including monetisation and analytics tools, while X Corp will make all monetisation programmes available locally
and provide training workshops. 

All platforms will implement digital literacy initiatives to strengthen media resilience and counter misinformation.

Remedies in AdTech and AI will align South Africa with leading global standards. Google will extend transparency measures from the EU, improving visibility into advertising costs and publisher payments, and will remove self-preferencing practices within its ad systems. AI companies will offer South African
media the same content controls and opt-out mechanisms available in the EU, alongside biannual training to support the development of a fair and functioning market for licensed content.

The Inquiry recommends that the Department of Trade, Industry and Competition issue a block exemption to enable collective bargaining by South African media over platform monetisation terms, AI content licensing, AdTech pricing, and joint ad-sales for community media. In parallel, the Department of Communication and Digital Technology is encouraged to develop content-moderation regulations under the Electronic Communications and Transactions Act (ECTA), introducing self-regulation frameworks for
social media platforms and establishing an independent Social Media Ombud to oversee public complaints and moderation practices.
Said MDPMI Chair James Hodge: “The Final Report and these remedies represent a landmark step toward rebalancing digital markets, protecting fair competition, and rebuilding the long-term sustainability of South
Africa’s news media. 

They reaffirm that a healthy, independent, and diverse press is essential to democracy, and that collective action, equitable regulation, and platform accountability are vital to safeguarding that principle for the digital future.”

The full report is available at: https://www.compcom.co.za/final-report-launch/

[ENDS]
Issued by:
Siyabulela Makunga, Spokesperson
On behalf of: The Competition Commission of South Africa

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EFF LEADER JULIUS MALEMA MUST STOP MISLEADING THE PUBLIC

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CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE_EDITOR©®™ 

EFF LEADER JULIUS MALEMA MUST STOP MISLEADING THE PUBLIC

EFF LEADER JULIUS MALEMA MUST STOP MISLEADING THE PUBLIC - THE GOVERNMENT OF PROVINCIAL UNITY IS THE MAJORITY IN KWAZULU-NATAL

The Inkatha Freedom Party Youth Brigade (IFPYB) in KwaZulu-Natal calls on EFF Leader Julius Malema to desist from misleading the public and from creating false expectations for the MK Party in KwaZulu-Natal. During his media briefing yesterday, Mr Malema made factually incorrect claims that the MK Party constitutes the majority in the KwaZulu-Natal Provincial Legislature

This reckless and misleading assertion appears to be an attempt to regain lost relevance and to create an illusion that the MK Party’s motion of no confidence against the hardworking Premier of KwaZulu-Natal, Honourable Thamsanqa Ntuli, has any chance of succeeding when it is tabled on Monday, 15 December 2025.

We must remind Mr Malema of basic political reality: If the MK Party were a majority in KwaZulu-Natal, they would be leading government, not sitting as the official opposition. Their status as the official opposition automatically means that the Government of Provincial Unity (GPU) is the majority governing formation in the province.

For further clarity, a majority requires 50% plus one of the total vote. The people of KwaZulu-Natal did not give any single party such a mandate. Instead, the electorate indicated their preference for a collaborative and stable provincial administration, which is why the IFP, ANC, DA and NFP came together to form the Government of Provincial Unity.

Mr Malema must stop giving false hope to his allies in the MK Party regarding the removal of the Premier through a vote of no confidence. Removing a Premier is not a trivial matter. The law is clear: Chapter 6 section 130(10) of the Constitution of our country, states that a Premier may only be removed from office if at least two-thirds of the Members of the Provincial Legislature vote in
favour of such a motion. In the case of KZN legislature that requires 53.33 members from 80 members in the legislature. EFF and MKP alliance have only 39 members.

Mr Malema’s sudden interest in this motion is nothing more than wishful thinking. It stems from misguided hopes that, should the MK Party’s motion miraculously succeed, the EFF might secure one or two MEC positions despite holding only two seats in the Legislature. 

This is despite the EFF’s own KZN Leader, stating last week that they would not be supporting the MK Party. The contradictory statements are yet another example of the EFF’s habitual flip-flopping.

The IFP Youth Brigade is not surprised by Mr Malema’s theatrics. His political posture has always thrived on instability, division, and disruption. The truth, however, is simple: The Government of Provincial Unity in KwaZulu-Natal is stable, effective, and development-focused under the stewardship of Premier Thamsanqa Ntuli and his Cabinet colleagues. 

The province has become a construction site, with roads being resurfaced, potholes repaired, houses built for vulnerable families, and major investments accelerating improvements in education infrastructure.

The MK Party’s frivolous attempt to table a motion of no confidence in Premier Ntuli is nothing but political grandstanding, a shallow stunt aimed at generating attention, not grounded in any fact-based criticism or substantive concerns. Supported by the minority EFF, this reckless move exposes their true intention: to destabilise a functional, united, and service-delivery-driven provincial administration.

In light of the EFF’s opportunistic behaviour, the IFP Youth Brigade in KwaZulu-Natal is calling on all IFP councillors across municipalities to table motions of no confidence against all EFF councillors currently occupying positions in local government.

The IFP Youth Brigade remains steadfast in its support for the Government of Provincial Unity under the diligent and principled leadership of Premier Ntuli. We will not allow the MK Party, nor its newly found partner, the EFF, to jeopardise peace, stability, or the developmental momentum of this beautiful KwaZulu-Natal province.

ENDS

Hon. Mncedisi Maphisa (MPL)
Chairperson: IFP KZN Youth Brigade 

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WARD COUNCILLOR ARRESTED TENDERS

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WARD COUNCILLOR ARRESTED TENDERS 

CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE_EDITOR©®™

Three suspects aged 39, 40 and 42, including a Ward Councillor, a driver, and a member of a political party from Madibeng Municipality in Brits, are appearing in the Pretoria Magistrates Court this morning following their arrest at Menlyn on Thursday, 11 December 2025, by the Anti-Corruption Investigation, Head Office of the Directorate for Priority Crime Investigation (DPCI).

The trio were arrested in an intelligence-driven operation after they demanded a gratification amounting to R300,000.00 from a local businessman in exchange for the awarding of a tender which was advertised by the Madibeng Municipality during November 2025.

It is alleged that the complainant was contacted by one of the suspects inquiring if the businessman was interested in being assisted to secure a tender. Subsequently, the trio is reported to have arranged a meeting with the businessman wherein they discussed the amount to exchange hands. The law-abiding businessman then reported the matter to the Serious Corruption Investigation, who in turn obtained the necessary documents to set up an operation. #fightingcrime #Hawks

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EFF CENTRAL COMMAND TEAM REFLECTED ON THE 2025 YEAR

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EFF CENTRAL COMMAND TEAM REFLECTED ON THE 2025 YEAR

CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE_EDITOR©®™


The Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) held its 4th Central Command Team (CCT) meeting of the 3rd National People’s Assembly, at the Zebula Golf Estate in BelaBela, from the 5th to the 7th of December 2025. 

The Central Command Team reflected on the Year 2025 in relation to organizational growth, governance and with regards to the ability of the organization to champion grassroots struggles of ordinary people and struggling communities. 

The theme of the EFF in 2025 was the Year of the Picket Lines, and it was a resounding success, which reaffirmed the EFF as the weapon of the poor and an enemy of domestic and global capital. This year, we demonstrated that our struggle does not end at the picket line; it advances directly into the chambers of Parliament, where we translate the people's demands into legislative action. We decided to internalize as a matter of fact, the guidance of Cabral, who taught us that "every practice produces a theory," and that "nobody has yet made a successful revolution without a revolutionary theory". Our actions, therefore, are a conscious and unapologetic application of this truth. 


The CCT was further appraised on the key resolution taken by the 3rd National People’s Assembly, which was to dissolve Regional Structures which were not fit for purpose and instead establish sub-regional structures across the country’s municipalities. 

Further to this, a key organizational achievement for 2025 was the launch of the EFF Youth Command, succeeding the Students' Command. This strategic reorganization, resolved upon by the 3rd National People’s Assembly, consolidates our youth leadership and empowers the next generation of Fighters for the battles ahead, including the crucial 2026 Local Government Elections

As of today, out of the 224 sub-regions in the country, the EFF has successfully set-up 184 sub-regional structures which represents an 82% completion rate towards having structures across the nation. We must applaud the successful early launches of Sub-Regional People's Assemblies in provinces such as Limpopo and Mpumalanga because they stand as testament to the disciplined execution of this mandate. These are an incredible achievement considering it was the first attempt at establishing these structures and all sub-regional people’s assemblies convened without a single incident of violence or bloodshed, and were all independently funded by sub-regional interim leadership cores and Commissars who were deployed in the sub-regions. 

The CCT wishes to further congratulate the following provinces for reaching the 100% target, meaning they launched all their sub-regions successfully. The provinces are, Limpopo, Free State, Mpumalanga, Gauteng and North West. This must be commended as it is an example of fulfilling the constitutional obligation in the EFF of completing a mandated task as expected. The CCT is further pleased with the patient work being done to build genuine and organic structures in the provinces of KwaZulu-Natal, Eastern Cape, Northern Cape and Western Cape, which are areas where the EFF has shown great potential, particularly in the 2024 National Government Elections. Particularly, the work in KZN has shown us that there continues to exist an appetite for the organisation in the province and such work must not be rushed and manipulated for compliance purposes as we witnessed ahead of the elections in 2024. 

It is on the foundation of strong organisational structures that the EFF will turn its electoral fortunes around in the 2026 Local Government Elections, and we wish to salute all delegates, members and ground forces who formed part of our structures from voting district to a branch level for delivering successful people’s assemblies. As the Central Command Team reflected on the year, we made key observations on a successful organisational presence on the streets to demand the dignity of our people but additionally on the qualitative contributions made in government. 

The EFF Parliamentary Caucus was an example of excellence for the EFF and has improved in leaps and bounds, as in each and every committee and all matters of national importance the EFF was a leading figure. Our vigilance extended across all departments, including our robust engagement in the Defence Budget Vote, where we demanded accountability for military spending and the welfare of veterans. 

The defeat of the Value Added Tax (VAT) increases which were proposed by the Government of National Unity (GNU) earlier this year, through logical and superior debate by the EFF in the Standing Committee on Finance, the National Assembly and ultimately the Western Cape High Court remains a historical achievement for the organisation. It was for the first time that the budget process was subjected to intense scrutiny and revision, and National Treasury’s neo-liberal and austeritybased budgeting was confronted by the EFF utilising the Money Bills and relevant legislation to protect poor and middle-class people. This victory is not an isolated event but a critical battle in our enduring war against the neoliberal economic framework—a framework that we have sought to dismantle since our inception and fought through our struggle for the nationalization of mines, banks, and other strategic sectors. 

Despite collusion by parties within and outside of the GNU to manipulate the South African people by making commitments which were not grounded in law, it took the EFF’s relentless efforts in Parliament and through court action to defeat taxation without consultation. To date, the commitment to provide alternative revenue generation mechanisms by the GNU and its allies in the form of small political parties has not materialized, and instead our people have been subjected to an increase in the fuel levy. 

The EFF will be vigilant in the 2026 budgeting process and will make sure we defend our people against regressive taxation, austerity, and a budget that represents stagnant growth and does nothing to address massive unemployment. The Parliamentary Caucus of the EFF cemented its place as the Official Opposition in Parliament on various critical matters of national importance, which includes exposing corruption in SETA board appointments and undermining the capture of the National Youth Development Agency (NYDA), by the proxies of the former liberation movement. Following the 2024 National Government Elections wherein the ANC lost political power, it became clear that they wanted to substitute their losses of seats in Parliament by capturing state institutions for cadre deployment and looting. 

It was the EFF which stood in their way, ensuring that corrupt appointments in SETA’s were reversed and ultimately leading to the resignation of the first Minister of Higher Education of the GNU who was deployed by the ANC, meaning we determined the deployment protocol of the ANC. Further to this, we stood in the way of the capture of the NYDA by the children of the corrupt who had lined up mediocre and fraudulent individuals to Chair the NYDA and steal money meant for youth development. In the fight against crime, the EFF has been at the forefront of ensuring the Executive does not hold itself accountable, while it is embedded in the corruption and capture of law enforcement agencies. 

Furthermore, due to a sustained EFF motion, the nation has now embarked on crucial public hearings to investigate and address the pervasive crisis of statutory rape—a stain that must blot our national consciousness. It cannot be that this scourge that saw more than 117,000 girls aged 10-19 give birth in a single year, can be allowed to continue right under our noses and without any criminal repercussions. As much as we support the work of the Madlanga Commission it remains a mechanism established by the Executive and led by the Judiciary. The legislature is a separate arm of the State which has its own Constitutional obligations to hold the Executive accountable, and it cannot do so by relying on other arms of the state to do work which is within its jurisdiction. 

Through the EFF the following Committees have been established to investigate and subvert crime: 

a) The Ad Hoc Committee to investigate allegations into the capture of law enforcement made by Lt General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi 

b) The Ad Hoc Committee to Investigate Senseless Killings in the City of Cape Town. It was the EFF that further called for the establishment of an Ad-Hoc Committee to investigate extortion in South Africa, particularly in the Western Cape, Gauteng, Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal. This motion was defeated by the major political parties in the GNU which govern these provinces either individually or through a provincial coalition. 
To date, despite the desperate hopes by our naysayers, the EFF has not been implicated in any way, shape or form in the capture of law enforcement agencies or in the undermining of state institutions for purposes of crime or corruption. It is for this reason that we speak fearlessly and without favour against crime and are able to champion investigations into crime by legislative bodies who hold that mandate given to them by the electorate. 

We are building a movement conscious of Fanon's warning about the failures of past revolutions. We reject the path of a self-serving "nationalist bourgeoisie" whose party becomes "a true instrument of power in the hands of the bourgeoisie" that immobilizes the people. Our mission is and will always be different. We have introduced numerous pieces of legislation to eradicate corruption and the continued subjecting of our people and nation to debt, and our people to indignity. 

Bills introduced by the EFF include the South African Reserve Bank Amendment Bill, the Insourcing Bill, the Public Finance Management Amendment Bill, the Liquor Amendment Bill, the Student Debt Cancellation Bill are all bills which have been introduced or reintroduced in Parliament in 2025 by the EFF. These legislative instruments are the weapons we carry in the pursuit of our 'Year of the Picket Lines,' designed to directly answer the grievances of the poor, the workers, and the students that we stand with. These bills are all at advanced stages and will rescue our nation’s fiscal policy from determination by foreign shareholding which has no interest in our developmental needs, they will release our country from the corrupt tendering system practiced by state institutions, the bills will put an end to the surrendering of our sovereignty to foreign financial institutions, they will put an end to the popularizing of alcohol through advertising, and they finally put an end to sacrificing of students to crippling debt. 

The EFF has additionally exhibited superior performance in local government where we have been able to secure positions of government within Mayoral Executives, particularly in the Cities Johannesburg, Tshwane, Ekurhuleni, eThekwini and Nelson Mandela Bay. 

We must commend these MMC’s as in Johannesburg we have seen a crackdown on crime, drug syndicates and illegal occupations of buildings led by the EFF MMC for Public Safety. Additionally, the EFF MMC for Health in the City of Johannesburg has established the first state of the art 24-hour clinic inthe city, while leading important initiatives to promote primary healthcare and disease prevention. 

In Tshwane the MMC for Environment and Agriculture has led a revival of the City, turning it into one of the cleanest cities in South Africa from the township to the CBD, and our MMC of Health has rooted out shops which sell food which is a threat to our people’s lives, shut down brothels and outlets which abuse young women and has led the establishment of the New Lusaka Clinic in Mamelodi whose construction has been delayed since 2017. 

In Ekurhuleni our MMC for Water leads a responsive City which save millions of litres of water by fixing leakages and has been leading in the commissioning of new water reservoirs in Ekurhuleni, as opposed to the 59-municipalities flagged by the auditor general for spending R2.3 billion on water tankers. It was an EFF motion which led to a resolution by the City of Ekurhuleni Council to insource 700 cleaners and 290 Ekurhuleni Metro Police Department Officers, a motion which was allocated its rightful budget this year of 2025. In Ethekwini Municipality the EFF Chairperson of the Human Settlements, Engineering, and Transport portfolio has focused his attention at building houses for people who are displaced due to natural disasters and are living in unsafe areas and has revitalised bridges in a City that continues to struggle with damaged infrastructure due to floods. 

It was the EFF in Nelson Mandela Bay Council, led by the EFF MMC for Budget and Treasury who following a declaration by the President cleared the debt of Ekuphumleni Old Age Home in Zwide, which amounted to R3.3 million. The EFF continues to run clearances of debt for indigent communities in Nelson Mandela Bay. 

It was the EFF in the Buffalo City Metro which defended vulnerable people whose homes were being demolished after they had built them using hard-earned money and subsequently secured a court interdict to stop the evictions which were being done without providing an alternative accommodation for the residents. 

Our governance track record is one that will guide our 2026 Local Government Elections strategy and at the centre of this strategy will be people and service delivery. The decision to dissolve the EFF Students’ Command and establish the EFF Youth Command has proven to be a correct decision by the 3rdNational People’s Assembly, and we now see the EFF Youth commanding a presence in communities and campuses. The dissolution has been able to maintain the strength of the EFF in Universities and TVET Colleges, with major victories in institutions such as the University of Witwatersrand, Durban University of Technology, Mangosuthu University of Technology, University of Venda, University of Limpopo, Walter Sisulu University, University of Pretoria, Cape Peninsula University of Technology and many more across the country. In by-elections, the EFF has maintained a steady increase across the country as the EFF continues to contest even in areas where others would dare not consider to. The commitment by the EFF to not selectively contest by-elections based on narrow and divisive ethnic mobilisation emphasises our identity as a party with a national footprint, which is registering growth in an environment of fewer byelections and low voter turnouts. 
Electoral science shows us that the EFF is not only maintaining its base, but breaking new ground and gaining votes outside of our traditional voter base and within the suburban and middle-class communities. 

Our desks, namely the EFF Gender Based ViolenceDesk and the EFF Labour Desk continue to be avenues where our people receive the necessary assistance when they fall victim to gender based violence, failures by law enforcement to follow up on cases and with regards to Labour, the Labour Desk has become a place of refuge for workers. The EFF remains the only organisation that holds the President of the Republic of South Africa accountable, while most of the political party'saudition for a seat at the GNU table. 

The Phala Phala matter, which was covered up using a Parliamentary majority in an irrational manner that undermines the Constitution is still at the Constitutional Court, a year after the EFF took it on review. This goes against the Norms and Standards of our Courts which dictate that judgements must be handed down within 3-months of a matter being heard. The EFF correctly led the Phala Phala March to the ConCourt to demand the release of the judgement and the continued delay justifies claims by those who say the judiciary is compromised and captured, and if the final arbiters allow the President of the Republic to be above the law, then that will signal the end of our democracy. The 6th administration of Parliament has become an arena of excellence for the EFF, and 2026 we will intensify all efforts to ensure that the people of South Africa know that they did not waste their votes when they elected the EFF to represent them. 

We know our duties and our mandate in Parliament, and we will fulfil it to the best of our ability. Every action that we take is guided by our unwavering commitment to our Seven Cardinal Pillars—the revolutionary and living compass that has directed our struggle since our founding. 

The current GNU has failed to grow the economy and create jobs in successive quarters, and this is underlined by stagnant economic activity, the collapse of industrial capacity and the entrenchment of mass unemployment. 

Economic growth for 2025 sat at 0.5% across all three quarters, while more than 11 million of our people remain jobless. This is not an accident of history, nor a statistical anomaly. It is a deliberate outcome of a political arrangement whose purpose is to protect a colonial economic architecture, while denying the black majority access to productive participation in the economy. This arrangement is what Fanon identified as the core blockage on the horizon: "What matters today, the issue which blocks the horizon, is the need for a redistribution of wealth". The GNU exists to prevent this redistribution. The GNU is not a break from the past, it is a continuation of an agenda that predates the 2024 elections. Under the illusion of renewal, the GNU reaffirms the same neoliberal commitments that have suffocated our country for a decade. 

They have chosen austerity over industrialisation, outsourcing over state capacity, privatisation over developmental governance, and foreign dependency over domestic resilience. The result is predictable: stagnant growth, crumbling infrastructure, collapsing state-owned entities and an economy defined by extraction without production. The GNU governs as though the working class is disposable. It has reversed the hard-won gains of labour and reduced economic dignity to a privilege reserved for the elites. 
Workers now face a cruel binary — accept wages that guarantee poverty, or remain unemployed indefinitely. In either case, capital triumphs while communities suffocate. This is not development; it is structural exclusion. 

The EFF recognizes that the GNU's failure is the logical conclusion of a system that is ripe for transformation. As Karl Marx and Frederick Engels remind us, "Of all the classes that stand face to face with the bourgeoisie today, the proletariat alone is really the revolutionary class." It is this revolutionary class—the workers, the landless, the unemployed—that our party is organized to lead. There is no industrial policy, no serious programme for localisation, no commitment to build productive capacity, and no vision to mobilise domestic capital towards manufacturing, agro-processing, pharmaceuticals, energy or rail. Instead, the GNU waits passively for foreign investors who will never industrialise this country, while the Public Investment Corporation, the largest allocator of capital on the continent, props up sectors owned by the white establishment. 

The state refuses to lead development because doing so threatens the interests of the few who designed this coalition. Municipalities are collapsing because they are treated as trading companies rather than developmental institutions. Transnet, Eskom, Denel and SAA are being hollowed out. Infrastructure spending is insufficient to stimulate demand. Budgeting remains a ritual of austerity, driven by ideological obedience rather than developmental logic. The GNU has tabled budgets that reproduce inequality, deepen unemployment and suppress social mobility. 

Every opportunity to stimulate growth, expand public capacity and ignite job creation has been ignored. By all developmental metrics, the GNU has failed. It has failed the poor, it has failed workers, it has failed the youth, and it has failed the nation. What we confront is not a governance crisis alone; it is an ideological crisis rooted in a refusal to abandon a colonial economic logic that protects the powerful at the expense of the dispossessed. 

The GNU cannot grow the economy because it has no developmental imagination, no structural capability and no commitment to transforming ownership patterns. South Africa deserves leadership capable of building, not outsourcing; industrializing, not privatizing; empowering, not excluding. Only a developmental agenda anchored by the state can reverse this decline and restore dignity to our people. 

The EFF has taken note of the rise of US-imperialism and fascism under the Donald Trump administration, which is engaged in in war crimes against people domestically and internationally. The onslaught on the people of Venezuela for the sole and admitted purpose of taking over Venezuela’s oil refineries, the manipulation of the electoral process in numerous elections in Latin America, the disruptive role of Donald Trump in the Middle East, including threats to colonise the Gaza Strip after funding the genocide of Palestinians, has resulted in the EFF correctly characterizing Donald Trump as a reincarnation of Adolf Hitler. 

We recently condemned in the strongest terms the disgraceful and politically motivated decision by FIFA to award Donald Trump a so-called 'FIFA Peace Prize,' an act which represents a direct violation of FIFA's own regulations and an endorsement of modern-day fascism. His attempt at unilaterally inviting and un-inviting countries to the G20 simply because of his political interests further confirms the assessment that Donald Trump is the new Hitler that the world is faced with, and failure to recognise this reality will result in devastating consequences for the global political and economic order. 

The EFF reiterates its continued call for global solidarity against Donald Trump and his reckless policies including trade, tariff and foreign policy which is underpinned by a desire for war and sustaining of an economy built on military strength and imperialism, rather than economic cooperation. Our stance is rooted in our foundational Pan-Africanist ideology, which demands African unity and resistance to all forms of neo-colonialism and imperialism. The continent, the diaspora and the world should cease from presenting themselves as subjects at the Oval Office, in order to pledge loyalty to a fascist. 

The first sign of resistance to the fascism of Donald Trump would arise at the coming G20 meeting, and contrary to the overly diplomatic stance of the South African government, the EFF calls for a boycott of the G20 in Miami, Florida, if South Africa is not allowed as a founding Member as a result of a declaration by Donald Trump. The world has defeated fascism through solidarity, and there is no diplomacy with fascism, and we must unite now or perish. 

The EFF wishes the people of South Africa a blessed and happy festive season, which must be characterized by love for those who are less fortunate. During this festive season, let us keep in mind and in prayer those who continue to live under oppression and conflict, in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Sudan, Ethiopia and Palestine. Let us strengthen our resistance as communities to gangsterism in the Cape Flats, and to violence which has overcome our communities leading to rampant murders, rape and gender-based violence. 

The EFF calls on the people of South Africa to celebrate this festive season responsibly and avoid drinking and driving and conflicts inspired by alcohol abuse. To Fighters and Ground Forces, let us protect our communities and recover for the war to come in 2026, and that war will begin as soon as the year begins with the Umntana Eskolweni Campaign and the Sizofunda Ngenkani Campaign. Education is the future of our nation and our continent, and the EFF must be at the forefront of ensuring that no child is denied access to education because they cannot afford. 

We fully embrace the responsibility of our historical moment, determined as ever to fulfill the unyielding mission of our generation. 

Therefore, as we stare into the promise of a new year, we refuse to blink, until we step closer to achieving the feat of economic freedom in our lifetime. 

Let us be safe as the task in 2026 to remove the corrupt and incompetent government in our municipalities is an urgent one, and it demands that our fighters, dare not fail, in this revolutionary mission! 

I thank you,
Julius Sello Malema 

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KZN GPU R3.6billion Additional Funding

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KZN GPU R3.6Billion Additional Funding

CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE_EDITOR©®™ 

Members of the KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) Legislature considered the Division of Revenue Amendment Bill (DORAB) - a critical instrument that adjusts financial allocations across all spheres of government. While the DA supports transparency and fiscal accountability, we must also confront the challenges that undermine meaningful public participation and service delivery.

The first essential improvement in this Bill is the introduction of ‘Column A’ in the schedules. This new column shows the original allocation, the adjustment and the revised allocation side by side – a simple but powerful reform. For too long, adjustments were buried in technical annexures, making it difficult for legislators and the public to track changes. Column A brings clarity and accountability. It allows us to see, at a glance, how much was promised, how much was changed, and what the final figure is. Transparency is not a luxury - it is the foundation of trust in public finance.

The MK Party and EFF did not welcome this development, effectively rejecting the Bill while exposing that transparency is clearly antithetical to both parties.

The second improvement is that the Bill provides for targeted adjustments, including disaster recovery funds and corrections to previous errors. For KZN, this includes an additional R354million under the Education Infrastructure Grant for repairing schools damaged by storms, and technical corrections shifting funds erroneously allocated under Human Settlements grants to the Provincial Equitable Share. These changes matter because they enable urgent repairs and restore fiscal accuracy. But allocations on paper mean nothing unless they translate into repaired classrooms, functioning clinics and safe roads.

However, we must be honest about the process. Section 118 of the Constitution obliges the KZN Legislature to facilitate public involvement in law-making. Yet, the timelines imposed by the National Council of Provinces (NCOP) make compliance almost impossible. The Bill was adopted by the National Assembly on 4 December, referred to provinces that evening, and negotiating mandates were due by 9 December. This left barely five days – which included a weekend - for committees to study the Bill, consult stakeholders, and deliberate. Public hearings were not feasible, with notices and documents instead posted online in the hopes of written submissions. None were received - not because people don’t care, but because the timeframe was unreasonable.

This is not how participatory democracy should work. The NCOP must respect provincial legislatures and the constitutional principle of public involvement. Rushed mandates erode trust and reduce oversight to a tick tick-box exercise. The DA calls for a review of these timelines to ensure that provinces can do their jobs properly.

The DA’s priorities remain clear:
• Transparency through ‘Column A’ and open reporting
• Efficient absorption of funds - no roll-overs, no delays
• Disaster recovery that delivers real repairs, not just plans.
• Health and education allocations that improve frontline services and;
• A legislative process that honours the Constitution, not undermines it.

The DA supports the intent of this Bill but will continue to fight for a process that is transparent, participatory and focused on outcomes - because budgets are not about numbers, they are about people.

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