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POLITICS ANALYSIS

What Dion George’s very public resignation means for the DA

The resignation of the DA’s longstanding federal finance chair Dion George presents multiple headaches for the party.

DA federal finance chair and former minister Dion George resigned from the party on Thursday, 15 January 2026. (Photo: Gallo Images / Luba Lesolle) DA federal finance chair and former minister Dion George resigned from the party on Thursday, 15 January 2026. (Photo: Gallo Images / Luba Lesolle)

When Dion George decided to resign – not just as the DA’s federal finance chair, but also as a Member of Parliament and as an ordinary party member – he would have considered multiple options of how to do it, ranging from the most benign to the most nuclear.

The most benign option: some kind of polite joint statement with DA leader John Steenhuisen or DA federal executive chair Helen Zille, announcing neutrally that George has chosen to tender his resignation, which the party has regretfully accepted.

The most nuclear option: to read a resignation letter live on national TV at midday on Thursday, containing multiple incendiary allegations about the DA leadership and Steenhuisen in particular.

That the usually mild-mannered George went with the second choice is a statement of just how badly this DA veteran feels himself to have been betrayed, given that he would know exactly the damage this might do to the political party to which he has dedicated the majority of his professional life.

For the DA’s part: by Thursday afternoon, trying to click on George’s profile on the DA website already produced a “Page Not Found” notification. George had been officially erased.

Minister Dion George (Minister of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment) at the G20 Environment and Climate Sustainability Working Group (ECSWG) Technical and Ministerial Meetings on Day 1 on October 13, 2025 in Cape Town, South Africa. The meeting aims to enhance cooperation amongst all G20 members and invitees to address environmental and climate change priorities. (Photo: Gallo Images / Misha Jordaan)
Then Environment Minister Dion George at the G20 Environment and Climate Sustainability Working Group Technical and Ministerial Meetings in Cape Town on 13 October 2025. (Photo: Gallo Images / Misha Jordaan)

George knows where bodies are buried

George is far from the first member of the DA’s higher echelons to depart shooting bullets. And as Helen Zille likes to remind journalists, high-profile resignations and defections happen in every political party.

There are particular aspects to the George case, though, that may present the party with greater headaches than previous departures.

The first is that George’s resignation letter alleged not just that Steenhuisen was incurring irregular expenses on the DA party credit card – as has been widely covered – but also that for the party’s federal legal commission to conclude that the expenditure on the card had been “fully reconciled”, the records must have been retrospectively tampered with.

Read more: Why I have chosen to leave the DA — Dion George

Zille’s brief statement on George’s resignation made no mention of whether this claim would be probed. But since George was the federal finance chair, he may well have kept his own records – and now, freed from the DA’s gag order, has nothing to lose by releasing them.

That raises a second aspect: as the party’s main money man for the best part of a decade, George presumably knows where any financial skeletons – if they exist – are buried. He has intimate knowledge of the party’s donors, its war chest, its tax affairs, the salaries it pays and has paid…

It is, in short, hard to think of a more risky person to so badly alienate, in any organisation.

If other DA leaders believed they could count on lingering party loyalty or old friendship ties to secure George’s future discretion, the nature of his Thursday resignation must surely have made them think twice.

It is the DA’s donors, however, who may be the greatest problem.

George’s resignation letter stated that he had been able to raise “record amounts” from donors due to the “reputation [George] helped to build for the DA of integrity, strong financial controls and sound stewardship of the money entrusted by our donors”.

Since public disclosures became mandatory, the DA has routinely pulled in the highest quantum of donations – and, importantly, recurring donations – of any South African political party, which does suggest that donors must have felt a high level of confidence in George’s financial management.

What are these donors to do now that the party’s finance chair, associated with high levels of financial probity, is telling the world not just that the party leader misused his credit card – even if the amounts in question were utterly pitiful – but that financial records were subsequently tampered with to protect him?

Read more: Mired in opacity — 10 hard truths about SA’s political party funding

Disciplinary investigation still pending

Some will feel that the most definitive way for the DA to put this mess behind them is for both George and Steenhuisen to go, but this is far from straightforward due to the shortage of compelling candidates to succeed Steenhuisen.

As Zille’s statement on George’s resignation noted, a disciplinary inquiry into Steenhuisen will still proceed.

But there are two stark dates for the party ahead: April, which is when the leadership election will be held; and November, which is the earliest possible date for the local government elections.

If Steenhuisen does not stand for re-election in exchange for retaining his ministerial post in the GNU, as some party insiders consider possible, the DA will be left scrambling for the right person to lead the party in an election year.

Read more: Steenhuisen’s leadership stability threatened by internal dynamics and Zille’s Joburg aspirations

Cape Town mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis, as has been widely discussed, is almost certainly the only candidate with sufficient national brand recognition, favourable public sentiment and internal popularity to steady the DA ship. Hill-Lewis would probably also be able to maintain the all-important Cape Town mayoralty simultaneously, as per the precedent set by Zille.

Hill-Lewis is known to have mixed feelings about the prospect of assuming the party leadership, although insiders say donors are already leaning on him to avail himself for election.

Cape Town Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis is seen as a possible contender to run against John Steenhuisen for the DA leadership. (Photo: Gallo Images / Brenton Geach)

It is something of a statement on the DA’s difficulty in retaining political talent over the past years, however, that it is hard to think of another potential candidate whom both the party and the public might greet with excitement. (This same critique could, of course, be levelled at multiple South African political parties.)

Other names being floated in the media of late would seem to either lack the necessary public profile – such as Werner Horn, despite his position as National Assembly house chair in the GNU – or be too divisive a figure within the party, such as DA Minister of Public Works and Infrastructure Dean MacPherson.

It is very likely, however, that succession discussions will gain new momentum after George’s public display – and that the fallout from Thursday’s broadcast will linger for some time. DM

Comments

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Alan Salmon Jan 16, 2026, 07:29 AM

The ANC is in terminal decline, MK are in disarray and the EFF are drifting sideways. The time is ripe for the DA to make serious inroads into government and now we have all this internal infighting and essentially lack of leadership. I hope this is resolved as soon as possible - we need the DA to step up to the plate asap

Dennis Bailey Jan 16, 2026, 07:39 AM

Pity Papas doesn’t have more profile, he’s been good for Umngeni

User Jan 16, 2026, 08:02 AM

This whole "reveal" by Dion George reminds of a flasher that is found wanting. The only appropriate comment is. Ag Shame man.

- Matt Jan 16, 2026, 01:27 PM

I had a very reasonable set of points to make - not positive abt Steenhuisen - but the DM bot has stopped me even submitting them for review. "It looks like your comment may not fully align with our community guidelines. To help keep this space respectful and constructive, please review and edit your comment. View our comments policy." @DM please have someone contact me and advise what in my planned comment didnt meet your comments policy. Only unsubstantiated point I had came from DM to start.

Mike Lawrie Jan 17, 2026, 06:39 AM

That DM bot was a bad move and has prevented me, and no doubt others, from making comments that we feel strongly about. It should be removed.

User Jan 17, 2026, 09:17 PM

Agreed. AI is no substitute for human thinking or empathy.

Concerned Enough Jan 16, 2026, 08:57 AM

The DA have shown they are not a serious political party and don't have real ambition to lead SA. I can't in good conscience vote for the DA while John Steenhuisen is there, and I am sure I am not alone. I would 100% vote for Georden Hill-Lewis

Paddy Ross Jan 16, 2026, 10:25 AM

I made a comment that disagreed with the first sentence of the above comment but DM's AI monitoring system does not approve of such comments.

Paddy Ross Jan 16, 2026, 01:43 PM

I said that the comment in question was factually incorrect and obviously so.

Glyn Morgan Jan 17, 2026, 09:09 PM

I agree with you, Paddy. At a time when the ANC is on the way down it is irresponsible to diss the DA for very minor things. SA needs the DA in power.

User Jan 17, 2026, 09:24 PM

On this subject, I have commented twice on this article, on unrelated issues. Said Bot firstly showed me the same set of three comments, twice. In the case of two of them, they were one or two words expressing agreement, yet the Bot flagged them as "too short". Is it now verboten that one should express agreement, without justifying so in a wordy response?

Glyn Morgan Jan 18, 2026, 08:30 AM

I disagree with the first sentence of the above comment.

Michele Rivarola Jan 16, 2026, 09:28 AM

The DA will certainly lose support and it is quite unfathomable how a party claiming to be the bastion of freedom and free speech has managed to jettison inter alia Maimane, Ntuli, Mazibuko, George and many others. If George decides to join another party he will take with him the whole of the DA's environmental lobby. Was it worth it?

- Matt Jan 16, 2026, 01:30 PM

This is Steenhuisen's decision. On par with choosing Roman Cabanac and expecting no consequences. If the man cannot manage a credit card, is he best placed to manage people or a political party?

The Proven Jan 16, 2026, 10:06 AM

I do think it is time for Steenhuisen to go - his behaviour isn't acceptable. I also think it is very poor from Deon George to allege that the reconciliation has been tampered with - he needs to substantiate a claim with evidence and can't make it without that.

Campbell Tyler Jan 16, 2026, 05:44 PM

I dont think George has to substantiate his claim, it is a logical accounting principle. An accounting record either reconciles or it doesnt. If it didnt reconcile when he was in office and it now reconciles, something must have been changed, retroactively. He doesnt need to substantiate that, it is the DA that must tell us how it is possible to retroactively reconcile something without adding or subtracting existing entries.

Karl Sittlinger Jan 17, 2026, 12:28 PM

A set of accounts not reconciling at one point and reconciling later does not automatically mean tampering. Discrepancies are often resolved when missing receipts, corrections or reclassifications are done. To allege manipulation, you need to show improper changes, not just that a reconciliation was later achieved. Otherwise it’s speculation, not evidence.

Glyn Morgan Jan 17, 2026, 09:11 PM

Right.

Gavrel Jan 16, 2026, 12:18 PM

Every country deserves the leaders that represents its constituency. In the case of South Africa: Not a single good one.

Robert Breyer Jan 17, 2026, 07:47 AM

What's the big deal here. How about this possible scenario Rebecca? George was a mediocre Minister. Steenhuizen fires him. George thinks he has been fired without cause and decides to fight back - by leaking the credit card and legal judgement stories to you. It's just people and politics. Nobody ever heard of Dion George before he became Minister, and he will soon be forgotten.

Michele Rivarola Jan 17, 2026, 05:20 PM

On the contrary George was the best DFEE minister over the last 20 years who for a change stood up for environmental rights of communities against large commercial interests. On the other hand your dear John seems to have fumbled the foot and mouth problem that SA is now afflicted with.

Glyn Morgan Jan 17, 2026, 09:14 PM

I agree.

Glyn Morgan Jan 17, 2026, 09:04 PM

This George cafafal is being blown up WAY OUT of it's importance. These people are politicians, they scrap all the time, this is not world news or even news for the city of Memel in the Free State. Time for Rebbeca Davis to call it a day, maybe go live in Memel.

User Jan 17, 2026, 09:20 PM

> "although insiders say donors are already leaning on him to avail himself for election." Seriously, Rebecca? Surely you know that "to avail oneself of" means to TAKE. It has nothing at all to do with to "be available".

Glyn Morgan Jan 18, 2026, 08:27 AM

What is this wierd fixation with George? He resigned, he is gone, move on. The political situation is too serious to stir a minor subject for months on end!