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HANGING-ON IN CHIEF

Roman Cabanac still in the job two months after Steenhuisen told him to exit

Despite a public outcry and a ministerial request for him to step down, Roman Cabanac remains entrenched as Chief of Staff in the Department of Agriculture.
Roman Cabanac still in the job two months after Steenhuisen told him to exit Illustrative image: Roman Cabanac, controversial chief of staff to the Minister of Agriculture, John Steenhuisen. (Graphic: Supplied)

Roman Cabanac – the podcaster turned senior civil servant – is still working as Chief of Staff, despite two months ago being told to step down by Agriculture Minister John Steenhuisen after a public outcry over controversial statements he had made. 

And attempts to get details of what must be a complicated human resources tussle behind the scenes have been met with radio silence. Cabanac’s status is boldly indicated on his X handle, with the profile: “Chief of Staff – Minister of Agriculture. Patriot. Civilisationist.

Earlier this month, he told Daily Maverick: “The rumours of my resignation have been vastly exaggerated”.

Linda Page, chief director of strategic communications at the Department of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development, told Daily Maverick: “The matter of Mr Cabanac is receiving attention, in line with government processes”. 

In a response to a parliamentary question dated 17 October, from ActionSA Chief Whip Lerato Ngobeni, Cabanac is listed in his role as Chief of Staff as one of three people attached to Steenhuisen’s ministerial office. 

In another parliamentary response, Steenhuisen revealed Cabanac would annually receive R1,436,022 as part of his remuneration package – at the taxpayers’ expense. 

When asked if she was surprised that Cabanac was still in office, despite the public pronouncement that he was asked to step down, Ngobeni said:  “Absolutely not. Mr Cabanac’s continued employment in the DA leader’s Ministerial Office is a clear indication that Minister Steenhuisen’s remarks at the Cape Town Press Club were merely an attempt to temporarily appease mounting concerns about Mr Cabanac’s unsuitability for the role.” 

She added: “It is evident that the Minister aimed to sweep the matter aside, or, as it appears, under the carpet.”. 

Previously, Daily Maverick reported labour lawyer Kgomotso Mufamadi as saying it would be difficult to remove Cabanac if he refused to resign, which could force Steenhuisen’s ministry to offer him a golden handshake. 

Read more: The process to get rid of Cabanac could drag on for months

Daily Maverick asked the parliamentary oversight committee on agriculture if this issue was brought up and if Steenhuisen would be called before the committee to explain the appointment and be asked to step aside. A response will be added if it is received. 

When asked what should happen next, Ngobeni said: “The minister should provide an immediate update on the matter. If, as I suspect, he is deliberately delaying it indefinitely, he must be held accountable for misleading the nation.”

After his appointment, Cabanac immediately courted controversy because of his online presence and commentary on social media platforms and his podcast. Breaking the news of his appointment, City Press described him as “a controversial podcaster and conservative social media activist”. 

This launched a flurry of reaction to Cabanac’s appointment: causing consternation from within and outside the Democratic Alliance, of which Steenhuisen is the current leader. 

Daily Maverick’s Rebecca Davis wrote that, in his podcast Morning Shot, he has referred to President Cyril Ramaphosa as a “p*es”, called ANC secretary-general Fikile Mbalula “handicapped”, and referred to Ramaphosa’s spokesperson as “Cyril’s Spokesretard”.

He is also a Trump supporter and pro-Putin. Davis wrote that Cabanac enjoys mocking Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, and had also tweeted that South Africa could “learn from Viktor Orban”, the Hungarian strongman who has dismantled democracy in that country.

Following the outcry, Steenhuisen told the audience at the Cape Town Press Club on 17 September that he had asked Cabanac to step aside, citing that he found it “far too distracting from the work of my ministry and our government” as Daily Maverick reported.

Read more: Reflective Steenhuisen asks Roman Cabanac to quit after internal DA backlash and public outrage

At that point, Steenhuisen took ‘full responsibility’ for Cabanac’s appointment. 

Russia and pushing boundaries 

The Centre for Analytics and Behavioural Change reported in September that Cabanac’s engagements with Russia were not only limited to online postings – he was hosted in May by Rosatom, which is the state-owned Russian nuclear energy company.

Cabanac would later state that some of his online behaviour was “simplistic and controversial”, and acknowledged that it looked unfavourable in his current position, which was non-partisan within the civil service. 

Daily Maverick reported that Cabanac said at the time: “In the past, I built my brand as a critic of the previous government. I pushed boundaries to gain attention on social media and sometimes made divisive, idle and poorly considered statements in the heat of online journalism. While some of the criticisms were well-founded, I also admit that others were insensitive and provocative, driven by the desire to debate,”.

Read more: By rewarding Roman Cabanac’s bigotry, Steenhuisen risks the future of the GNU DM

Comments (10)

alexgordon1978 Nov 18, 2024, 10:39 AM

all of the attention and controversy is feeding his ego?

Hidden Name Nov 18, 2024, 11:01 AM

And no request for comment from the DA or from Steenhuizen? The only comment in the entire piece being a statement from Action SA? That seems like a deliberate attempt to misrepresent things.

Kevin Venter Nov 18, 2024, 12:23 PM

And yet according to Bob, my charge of biased reporting doesn't stick and according to Tumelo, I cannot read for comprehension. Funny how the people who are doing real damage still walk around freely without constant media spotlight on them!

megapode Nov 18, 2024, 03:29 PM

Action SA have only two things on their agenda right now. Running immigrants out of town (because that will fix nearly everything) and making the DA look bad (presumably this fixes everything else).

Sydney Kaye Nov 18, 2024, 03:17 PM

His Brand?

megapode Nov 18, 2024, 03:35 PM

On social media, where you can build a subscriber base and make some money. But once you attract an audience and they start paying, you better keep delivering. Cabanac is not the only one such, there's a bunch of SAns (including Cabanac, Jeremy Nel and Renaldo Gouws) known as the "pod bros".

megapode Nov 18, 2024, 03:39 PM

I used to say that I wish the President would tell Parliament the sky is blue so that we can watch the DA go through all sorts of contortions to show that it's actually some other colour. But now I think that about ASA. Let Zille mention a blue sky and ASA will say almost anything to discredit her

Noelsoyizwaphi@gmail.com Nov 18, 2024, 04:31 PM

Steenhuisen was to ask his newly appointed chief of staff, Cabanac, to resign, but gave no time-lines. He also said at the time that “there has been a conversation with Cabanac and that an HR process is under way”, again no specifics given. Is it our expectation that DM must not make follow up?

Benjamin Lubbe Nov 18, 2024, 05:38 PM

This debacle is a own goal and Steenhuizen should have known better. John Steenhuizen carry the accountability for this very poor judgement and no one else. That said, Cabanac is a self entitled opportunist so he will milk it for all he can until he is forced to leave.

wmwchris Nov 18, 2024, 09:36 PM

Another nail in the once excellent Daily Maverick's coffin. Change the name to Daily Mouthpiece. You offer no justification for his removal, none whatsoever. Your smear campaign is disgraceful. You do not like his opinions. There is no failure or misconduct to warrant his departure.

feathers_mail Nov 18, 2024, 10:41 PM

There's no question that his opinions are divisive. I think they're ample evidence of that. Given that, does Cabanac offer enough upside to justify the blowback?

Kevin Venter Nov 19, 2024, 04:59 AM

Thank god another person actually gets the bigger question. DM implies that Cabanac is not fit to hold the position because of his opinion (not a crime) yet we have multiple officials fingered in corruption (crime) sitting in parliament NOT sharing the same level of Maverick reporting scrutiny.

Richard Grant Nov 19, 2024, 05:32 AM

Government is riddled with communists, black racists, fraudsters, incompetants, unqualified - all ignored by the DM. Maybe, just maybe, Cabanac is good at his job which should be the sole measure of his worth. Otherwise it is jobs for only the politically correct.

Mike Pragmatist Nov 19, 2024, 08:56 AM

“The matter of Mr Cabanac is receiving attention, in line with government processes”. We have a long enough history of government processes to know how slow, inefficient and unfit for purpose they are.

kishore.ramsewak@gmail.com Nov 19, 2024, 12:51 PM

This will end up in LABOR court and Roman will win.