Defend Truth

Daily Maverick Webinar

Power and houses: How ANC, Good and DA Cape Town mayoral candidates are angling for your vote

Power and houses: How ANC, Good and DA Cape Town mayoral candidates are angling for your vote
From left: Cape Town mayoral candidates Brett Herron (Good), Geordin Hill-Lewis (DA) and Cameron Dugmore (ANC). (Photos: Leila Dougan | Gallo Images/Brenton Geach)

On Wednesday, the ANC, Good and the DA City of Cape Town candidates spoke to Daily Maverick’s Marianne Thamm about housing, renewable energy and why residents should vote for them.

With a week left before South Africans head to the polls, Daily Maverick’s Marianne Thamm hosted The Great Mayoral Debate: Cape Town edition webinar on Wednesday with the Good party’s Brett Herron, the DA’s Geordin Hill-Lewis and the ANC’s Cameron Dugmore, to hear their takes on affordable housing, energy and why residents should vote for them.

“[We] have a proud track record of good governance and clean audits. In Cape Town, we’re saying we’re ready to go further than good governance and clean audits. We want to protect residents from collapsing service delivery with the ANC,” said Hill-Lewis, who is the DA’s mayoral candidate for the City of Cape Town. 

Hill-Lewis said the party will “push the boundaries” by ending load shedding, pushing for the devolution of the railway and by filling the space left by the South African Police Service (SAPS) by deploying more law enforcement.

Herron, Good’s mayoral candidate for Cape Town, said they would introduce a municipality that has “a generosity of spirit, a culture of diversity” instead of the current one that was “myopic” and had “an intolerance of diversity”. 

The party would address hunger and unemployment and focus on creating “liveable and functional communities”. 

Speaking on behalf of the ANC was Dugmore, the provincial elections head. As to who the party’s mayoral candidate is for the city, he said the party had decided that all mayoral candidates would be announced “after a vetting process which would be approximately one week after the elections”. 

“We’ve made this decision because we’re campaigning on the ANC’s value proposition, which is about building communities together,” he said. 

Dugmore admitted that the party had made “serious mistakes” before but that it had a track record of delivering free basic services for the poor. 

Taking jabs at the DA, Dugmore said that “in the past 15 years with the DA [running the City of Cape Town] we’ve seen worsening potholes and blocked drains. What we’d introduce is a proper process to deal with transport. We’d bring in an inclusive district development modal, which would ensure that services don’t just reach the elite.”

When Thamm asked what the DA had done to make life better for poor people, Hill-Lewis said the “key reason” he is running for mayor in the city is that he’d spent most of his career working in different parts of the city, from Philippi to Crossroads, and he’d “seen how much work still needs to be done”.

“I make the commitment to ensuring that the city does more to invest more in infrastructure [in poor communities] but it’s also important to acknowledge that an independent index by News24 confirmed that all DA municipalities came at the top in terms of service delivery,” said Hill-Lewis.

Housing

As to how the parties will address affordable housing in the city, Hill-Lewis made a “firm commitment” that if they are re-elected, they “will do better in releasing well-located city-owned land to foster affordable housing”. 

“I’m happy to be held accountable for that,” he said.

To demonstrate how serious the City is about affordable housing, it has asked Public Works Minister Patricia de Lille to release Acacia Park for use as social housing, said Hill-Lewis. Acacia Park is a village that houses parliamentarians in Cape Town’s northern suburbs. 

A few weeks ago, De Lille dismissed the request as an attempt to “electioneer in my name”. She then urged the City to release its own land – including several sites in the CBD which she and Herron had apparently tried to release in 2017 and 2018

Hitting back at Hill-Lewis’s response, Dugmore said the “contradiction in what he’s saying is that every month they continue to sell [well-located land] to private developers which could instead be used for social housing”. 

“What we’re doing is calling for them to stop selling municipal land. 

“[Because] the DA is funded by private developers they can’t be trusted to deliver to the poor.”

Herron pointed out that Good “was started over a fallout with the DA over social housing”.

“In the past 15 years the DA has not built any social housing close to the city. In 2017, we came close to delivering social housing but the DA stopped this,” he said. 

“However, we must release the land we started with in 2017 and other sites for social housing.”

Energy 

When asked whether the City would endorse renewable energy, Hill-Lewis said his party was campaigning for less reliance on Eskom. 

“[Eskom] is expensive, it doesn’t work and it relies on coal which is environmentally damaging. We want to move to independent power producers so we can reduce the climate impact and end load shedding,” he said. 

Dugmore criticised the province for refusing to appoint an environmental commissioner, “whose tasks are to look into issues of energy and to help us prepare for climate change”. 

“The DA has refused to appoint an environmental commissioner because they’re more in favour of the big developers,” he said. 

“The President has given clear directions as to how we can have a just transition from coal to renewable energy. The City of Cape Town doesn’t have a detailed plan and their plans according to their own admission aren’t feasible.” 

If Good were to take over the City of Cape Town, it would only procure renewable energy and disinvest public funds from fossil fuel investments, said Herron. 

“We would introduce the pace model, where homeowners are able to purchase solar panels where the City would assist them and they could repay it with their rate accounts over a 20-year period,” he said. 

For poorer communities, the City would install solar panels. DM

Gallery

Comments - Please in order to comment.

Please peer review 3 community comments before your comment can be posted

X

This article is free to read.

Sign up for free or sign in to continue reading.

Unlike our competitors, we don’t force you to pay to read the news but we do need your email address to make your experience better.


Nearly there! Create a password to finish signing up with us:

Please enter your password or get a sign in link if you’ve forgotten

Open Sesame! Thanks for signing up.

We would like our readers to start paying for Daily Maverick...

…but we are not going to force you to. Over 10 million users come to us each month for the news. We have not put it behind a paywall because the truth should not be a luxury.

Instead we ask our readers who can afford to contribute, even a small amount each month, to do so.

If you appreciate it and want to see us keep going then please consider contributing whatever you can.

Support Daily Maverick→
Payment options

Every seed of hope will one day sprout.

South African citizens throughout the country are standing up for our human rights. Stay informed, connected and inspired by our weekly FREE Maverick Citizen newsletter.