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Western Cape Finance Minister re-tables R89. 3 billion Appropriations Bill as national budget faces uncertain future

Western Cape Finance Minister re-tables R89. 3 billion Appropriations Bill as national budget faces uncertain future

IOL News03-06-2025
Western Cape Finance MEC Deidré Baartman delivers the 2025 Budget Speech in the Provincial Parliament.
Image: Supplied
Western Cape Finance Minister Deidré Baartman re-tabled the province's R89.3 billion Appropriations Bill after the national government unexpectedly withdrew its budget, including the legally binding Division of Revenue Bill.
Addressing the Western Cape Provincial Parliament, Baartman clarified that although the process had to be repeated for legal compliance, 'nothing in substance in the Western Cape Appropriations Bill has changed.'
The 2025/26 Western Cape Budget still allocates a total of R269.5 billion over the next three years, with more than 80%, or R215.8 billion, dedicated to social services.
This includes R101 billion for education, R100 billion for health, R6.4 billion for housing, and R8.4 billion for social protection.
In terms of strategic spending, the province is staying the course on its four apex priorities: R43.8 billion to 'Growth for Jobs,'
R3.9 billion to safety,
R194.9 billion to build an 'Educated, Healthy and Caring Society,'
and R23.4 billion to innovation, culture, and governance.
'In light of this,' said Baartman, 'the doors of the Western Cape Government have, and will continue to, remain open.'
Despite the chaos at a national level, Baartman assured residents that essential services would remain intact, crediting this stability to provincial fiscal discipline.
'Despite the uncertain fiscal environment, the Western Cape Government can assure this house that we have kept strict protocols in place on cash flow management in the province to ensure service delivery continues uninterrupted,' said Baartman.
She also acknowledged the tireless work of officials during this turbulent period.
'2025 has really seen us exercise our legal and procedural muscles within the uncertain fiscal space nationally, and I would like to thank the Provincial Treasury team as well as the Legal team in the Department of the Premier for their assistance and guidance throughout this process.'
Looking ahead, Baartman expressed hope for a smoother national budget process next year.
'For certainty, fiscal stability and trust, it is my sincere hope that the national budget process for 2026 will flow more effortlessly.'
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The National Assembly Programme heard that individual budget votes of departments will have to be passed by the National Assembly next week otherwise the Appropriation Bill will be sent back to the standinng committee for further processing. Image: Armand Hough / Independent Newspapers Parliament is at a crossroads on the passing of the budget for 2025/26 just six days before the National Assembly adopts the Appropriations Bill. This takes place as the second biggest party in the Government of National Unity (GNU), the DA, has threatened not to vote for the budget votes of those ministers they deem are compromised and should be axed from the Cabinet. The Appropriation Standing Committee is set to adopt its report today ahead of the passing of the bill by the National Assembly on Wednesday, before the bill is sent to the National Council of Provinces for concurrence. Briefing the Programme Committee on Thursday, National Assembly secretary Masibulele Xaso took the chief whips of political parties on the four steps to be followed when the bill is passed next week. Xaso said once the Standing Committee on Appropriation has submitted its report on the bill, the House will first consider that report and thereafter the bill. 'After the report is considered, we then move to the First Reading of the bill. After the First Reading of the bill, we'll do the departmental votes and after the departmental votes, we then do the schedule.' Xaso also said if the National Assembly rejected the First Reading of the bill, it rejected the bill. 'The House may consider to pass, amend, or reject any legislation before it. Any legislation means any legislation. So in this context, on the first reading of the appropriation book, the process ends there,' he said. Xaso stated that when the House passed the First Reading of the bill, MPs will consider the departmental votes, one by one. Where there was no agreement on all the votes, the bill will be recommitted to the committee for amendments. 'The vote, together with the bill, must then be referred to the Standing Committee on Appropriation for further processing. So in that event, we will then not proceed to take a decision on the schedule. We will not proceed to take a decision on the Second Reading of the bill.' He also said should the Second Reading of the bill not be agreed, and then the bill will be rejected. 'It won't go back to the committee because the bill would be dead in the parliamentary process. It would mean the bill must be reintroduced into the system,' Xaso said. EFF MP Hlengiwe Mkhaliphi enquired whether there will be fresh elections should the bill not be passed. 'If we take the bill to the committee to process, the fact of the matter is that it will mean that we as Parliament failed to pass the budget. Does that mean, if Parliament fails to budget, we must go to elections?' Mkhaliphi asked. In response, Xaso said the House must proceed with First Reading of the bill and once it was rejected, the process ended there. 'The bill, at that level, must go to committee to look at the nature of amendments and implications and come to the House with a report,' added Xaso. MK Party MP Visvin Reddy said the law states that if the budget can't be passed, there should be fresh elections. 'That is what the law says. Why try to second guess the law. It is like trying to fit a puzzle where it can't fit.' 'If the law says we can't pass the budget so be it let's go for fresh elections.' But, national Assembly Speaker Thoko Didiza said there were rules on how to run the parliamentary business. 'We need to look our rules as the National Assembly,' Didiza said. MPs heard that the budget must be passed within four months in the new financial year, which is the end of July. Parliamentary legal advisor Frank Jenkins indicated that the Public Finance Management Act sets out how government can spend prior to budget being approved. Jenkins said in the first four months the government can spend 45% of budget equivalent to previous year budget and thereafter 10% each month. 'If funds are used prior to budget, the funds are used for existing programmes. Money is going to be deducted when the budget is finally passed.' However, Jenkins said the implied motion of no confidence, when a budget was not passed eliciting elections, was not applicable in South Africa as the constitution provided for dissolution of Parliament when its term expired and by resolution after three years after the elections. 'The Constitution does not envisage in the first or second year after the elections,' Jenkins said. Cape Times

Parliament at a crossroads as budget vote approaches
Parliament at a crossroads as budget vote approaches

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Parliament at a crossroads as budget vote approaches

The National Assembly Programme heard that individual budget votes of departments will have to be passed by the National Assembly next week otherwise the Appropriation Bill will be sent back to the standinng committee for further processing Image: Photographer: Armand Hough / Independent Newspapers Parliament is at a crossroads on the passing of the budget for 2025/26 just six days before the National Assembly adopts the Appropriations Bill. This takes place as the second biggest party in the Government of National Unity (GNU), the DA, has threatened not to vote for the budget votes of those ministers they deem are compromised and should be axed from the Cabinet. The Appropriation Standing Committee is set to adopt its report on Friday ahead of the passing of the bill by the National Assembly on Wednesday, before the bill is sent to the National Council of Provinces for concurrence. Briefing the Programme Committee on Thursday, National Assembly secretary Masibulele Xaso took the chief whips of political parties on the four steps to be followed when the bill is passed next week. Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Advertisement Next Stay Close ✕ Xaso said once the Standing Committee on Appropriation has submitted its report on the bill, the House will first consider that report and thereafter the bill. 'After the report is considered, we then move to the First Reading of the bill. After the First Reading of the bill, we'll do the departmental votes and after the departmental votes, we then do the schedule.' Xaso also said if the National Assembly rejected the First Reading of the bill, it rejected the bill. 'The House may consider to pass, amend, or reject any legislation before it. Any legislation means any legislation. So in this context, on the first reading of the appropriation book, the process ends there,' he said. Xaso stated that when the House passed the First Reading of the bill, MPs will consider the departmental votes, one by one. Where there was no agreement on all the votes, the bill will be recommitted to the committee for amendments. 'The vote, together with the bill, must then be referred to the Standing Committee on Appropriation for further processing. So in that event, we will then not proceed to take a decision on the schedule. We will not proceed to take a decision on the Second Reading of the bill.' He also said should the Second Reading of the bill not be agreed, and then the bill will be rejected. 'It won't go back to the committee because the bill would be dead in the parliamentary process. It would mean the bill must be reintroduced into the system,' Xaso said. EFF MP Hlengiwe Mkhaliphi enquired whether there will be fresh elections should the bill not be passed. 'If we take the bill to the committee to process, the fact of the matter is that it will mean that we as Parliament failed to pass the budget. Does that mean, if Parliament fails to budget, we must go to elections?' Mkhaliphi asked. In response, Xaso said the House must proceed with First Reading of the bill and once it was rejected, the process ended there. 'The bill, at that level, must go to committee to look at the nature of amendments and implications and come to the House with a report,' added Xaso. MK Party MP Visvin Reddy said the law states that if the budget can't be passed, there should be fresh elections. 'That is what the law says. Why try to second guess the law. It is like trying to fit a puzzle where it can't fit.' Reddy urged that the law be looked into its raw form and follow it. 'If the law says we can't pass the budget so be it let's go for fresh elections.' But, national Assembly Speaker Thoko Didiza said there were rules on how to run the parliamentary business. 'We need to look our rules as the National Assembly,' Didiza said. MPs heard that the budget must be passed within four months in the new financial year, which is end of July. Parliamentary legal advisor Frank Jenkins indicated that the Public Finance Management Act sets out how government can spend prior to budget being approved. Jenkins said in the first four months the government can spend 45% of budget equivalent to previous year budget and thereafter 10% each month. 'If funds are used prior to budget, the funds are used for existing programmes. Money is going to be deducted when the budget is finally passed.' However, Jenkins said the implied motion of no confidence, when a budget was not passed eliciting elections, was not applicable in South Africa as the constitution provided for dissolution of Parliament when its term expired and by resolution after three years after the lections. 'The Constitution does not envisage in the first or second year after the elections,' Jenkins said.

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