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One-year-old GNU brings stability, but fails on other metrics

One-year-old GNU brings stability, but fails on other metrics

Mail & Guardian20-06-2025
No goal: ActionSA, which chose to remain outside the government of national unity, gave a damning evaluation of the GNU. Photo: @Presidency/ZA/X
Observers say the government of national unity has kept parties such as the EFF and MK in check, but jobs, growth and reform remain elusive
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MK Party urges patience as Zuma 'narrows down' shortlist of candidates for new secretary-general
MK Party urges patience as Zuma 'narrows down' shortlist of candidates for new secretary-general

TimesLIVE

time9 hours ago

  • TimesLIVE

MK Party urges patience as Zuma 'narrows down' shortlist of candidates for new secretary-general

The MK Party has called on its supporters to be patient as party leader Jacob Zuma finalises the appointment of a new secretary-general to succeed Floyd Shivambu. 'The president will soon call the national leadership and announce who will take over the SG position. He is still assessing, he asked that he not be rushed because he doesn't want to repeat past mistakes,' the party's head of presidency Magasela Mzobe said in Durban on Friday. 'Many people are eyeing the position but the president's priority is a candidate who can maintain stability and respect the chain of command without letting the role's importance go to their head,' he added. Mzobe was addressing MK Party supporters who had come to back former youth leader Bonginkosi Khanyile in his civil unrest trial at the Durban high court. Khanyile is facing charges of incitement of violence and contraventions of the Disaster Management Act related to the July 2021 civil unrest that followed Zuma's incarceration for contempt of court. Khanyile has often been mentioned as a possible candidate for the SG role since Shivambu's removal and on Friday party supporters chanted his name as Mzobe spoke about the position. His longtime ally Philani 'Gazuzu' Nduli, who is also a leader in the party's youth structures, has been campaigning for him on social media. However, Mzobe warned against speculation, saying Zuma was on the cusp of naming the new appointee. 'Let's not disturb him by bringing up names, he's almost there. He has narrowed down his shortlist of candidates from seven names to three and if we can give him a week he may reach a decision on that one name.' Shivambu was axed from the position at the beginning of June after a controversy surrounding his unsanctioned Easter visit to fugitive pastor Shepherd Bushiri in Malawi. Since then, the party has been plagued by internal squabbles in and outside parliament, including the well-publicised conflict between deputy president John Hlophe and Nhlamulo Ndhlela and Duduzile Zuma-Sambudla, and former Mpumalanga leader Mary Phadi torching the party's constitution after losing a court battle to Busisiwe Mkhwabane. Mzobe tried to downplay that, reassuring that supporters that they were 'small issues' instigated by the fallout with Shivambu. 'He (Zuma) wanted to calm your nerves on the media reports that makes it look like the party is in trouble. It's a small issue of a man he entrusted with the role of secretary, but that man acted in his own interests and ultimately had to be removed when more issues came to light about him, both locally and abroad. 'When he was redeployed he thought he was too big in the party to be disciplined and started his movement that we are not involved with as a party. We ask you to not take part in the plans that the comrade is busy with because they are not what the MK stands for.' Shivambu has since taken jibes at the party and has started a 'Mayibuye consultation process', where he is consulting the public on whether he should establish a new party, while maintaining he would remain a member of the MK Party. Khanyile drew parallels between his and Shivambu's situations in the party, pointing out he was also removed from his position as a founding leader of the youth. 'I was sure that I was the most effective leader; a leader with clarity and educated with more than five degrees.' He stated, however, that their responses to those situations differed, pointing out that he remained committed to the party when he was stripped of a position while Shivambu looked to be jumping ship and starting his own party. 'When you think the organisation is mistreating you and remain truthful to the party, that's when we can tell that you're a true volunteer and revolutionary of the organisation. You can't be removed today and tomorrow you're no longer a volunteer, even if you're the most educated and civilised person in society. As you expect to lead, you must also expect to be led.' Khanyile said he was sceptical about the prospects of the Mayibuye process, predicting it would not succeed. He urged supporters to welcome Shivambu back when that eventually happens. 'We don't hate Floyd Shivambu because we are led by president Zuma. He is going to fail in Mayibuye and come back here in the MK. When he does, we must welcome him with a smile and tell him 'Floyd you're not who you think you are, come back home.' Ubaba removes you today and deploys you tomorrow.'

Springsteen crosses over into Mexico
Springsteen crosses over into Mexico

Mail & Guardian

time12 hours ago

  • Mail & Guardian

Springsteen crosses over into Mexico

Graphic: John McCann/M&G) In May, Donald Trump took a break from attacking South Africa on X to lash out at Bruce Springsteen, calling him 'highly overrated', 'dumb as a rock', 'a dried out 'prune' of a rocker' and 'a pushy, obnoxious JERK'. He followed the tirade with a crude video showing himself, in a Make America Great Again cap, hitting a golf ball that hurtles off a fairway and knocks Springsteen down on stage. Although younger artists such as Jason Isbell and Sam Fender — both influenced by Springsteen — continue to make compelling rock music, it's been a long time since rock held the kind of cultural power it once had in the United States. But Springsteen's vision of a generous, inclusive America, an America in which 'the losers' are given deeply empathetic attention, still carries enough moral weight to threaten Trump's narcissism — as fragile as it is massive. The four great records Springsteen released between 1975 and 1982 — Born to Run, Darkness on the Edge of Town, The River, and Nebraska — chart an arc from youthful passion and rebellion, a longing for escape, preferably driving into the night in a Mustang, to a gritty and often mournful reckoning with lives sinking into crisis. This sequence comes to a head in the stripped-down sonic palette of Nebraska, an elegiac rendering of the underside of Reagan's America. The record reaches deep into economic desperation, unemployment, violence, moral ambiguity and the quiet ruin of domestic life through intimate portraits of people pushed to the edge. It is a desolate, haunting work, its emotional tenor distilled into the eerie, elemental howl at the end of State Trooper. There was strong work after the huge popular success of Born in the USA (1984) propelled seven singles into the Top Ten and turned Springsteen into a figure of national devotion. Tunnel of Love (1987) offered an emotionally complex portrait of a crumbling marriage; We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions (2006) was a rambunctious return to the radical current in American folk music; Wrecking Ball (2012) was a blistering, politically charged reckoning with the social costs of the financial crisis; and Western Stars (2019) an often gorgeous and cinematic meditation on ageing and solitude, imbued with a quiet, hard-earned sense of grace. The great album in Springsteen's later work that takes its place with the canonical four is The Ghost of Tom Joad. It is also the record most starkly at odds with Trump's idea of America, and the brutality he first unleashed through rhetoric and then through ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement). Released in 1995, its acoustic minimalism recalls the starkness of Nebraska, but it is a very different record — more polished, more spacious and directly political. Nebraska marked a turn from the deindustrialising rust belt of the Northeast to the rural Midwest. Joad moves outward again, into the borderlands of California. It tells stories of people crossing deserts, sleeping under bridges, drifting through motel towns and prison gates — lives lived at the sharpest edges of America. There are echoes of Joad in Devils & Dust (2005), which includes several great songs. Matamoros Banks reaches back to Across the Border, a sublime track on Joad. Both explore the longing for life across the border — in the former, the narrator is dead, his body floating in the Rio Grande. In the latter, the narrator is on the eve of his passage across the river, imagined as a passage into hope. But Devils doesn't have the same thematic coherence or concentrated, elemental power as Joad. The wells from which a growing understanding of Springsteen's work is drawn have always been more numerous than his studio albums. His often extraordinary live performances, and a vast ecosystem of bootlegs, radio recordings and outtakes, have long enriched our sense of his work. In 1998, Tracks brought together 66 previously unreleased songs. Since then a treasure trove of outtakes from the Darkness and River recording sessions have been released, along with an avalanche of officially issued live recordings. Tracks 2: The Lost Albums was released at the end of last month. It compiles 83 songs, including six previously unreleased albums recorded between 1983 and 2012, along with a seventh record collecting songs from 1994 to 2011. The first, LA Garage Sessions '83, was recorded between Nebraska and Born in the USA, and, as Springsteen has noted, is a lo-fi bridge between the two. Richfield Whistle, a prison song, leans closer to Nebraska, while The Klansman, though lyrically in that same terrain, feels sonically like a step toward Born in the USA, evoking something of the mood of Downbound Train. The Streets of Philadelphia Sessions, recorded in the early 1990s, continues the tone and texture of the 1993 Oscar-winning single, extending its drum machine and synth-driven sound across a fuller range of material. Faithless, recorded in 2005-06, was written as a soundtrack to a never-made 'spiritual Western' — rumoured to have been a Martin Scorsese project — and includes several instrumentals and gospel-tinged ballads. Somewhere North of Nashville, laid down in tandem with the Joad recordings, has a number of very strong songs, some leaning into pedal steel, honky-tonk and rockabilly. Silver Mountain has already been proposed as a new entry into the Springsteen canon, and Blue Highway, with its echoes of Hank Williams, is just as good. Few critics have resisted the phrase 'lush orchestration' when describing Twilight Hours, recorded during the Western Stars sessions. There are some beautiful songs here and High Sierra is transcendent. Perfect World gathers unreleased songs from 1994 to 2011. It lacks the cohesion of an album, but includes moments of startling power. Rain in the River, which would have slotted seamlessly into Wrecking Ball, would be a great full-throttle E Street Band song performed live. But it is Inyo, the fifth album in the collection, that will take its place as one of Springsteen's great records. It's been known for some years that he shared Inyo with close family and friends, and that he values it highly. He has explained that it was mostly written in hotel rooms during the Ghost of Tom Joad tour, which ran from 1995 to 1997. But three of the songs contain moments — in lyrics or melody — that echo material on the Joad album, suggesting that perhaps they were composed earlier. Inyo is a quiet record. While it shares Joad's intimacy and restraint, its sound is warmer, more layered, and often strikingly beautiful. The arrangements feature violin, trumpet, accordion, acoustic guitar and gently luminous inflections of Mexican folk music. The Lost Charro stretches Springsteen's range with a sensitive mariachi-backed arrangement. He sings with an uncharacteristic softness, at times moving into falsetto. Springsteen has always worked to expand the vista opened by Walt Whitman, to widen the promise of America. This album goes further. While Joad was largely set on the American side of the border, Inyo crosses into Mexico. It directly confronts the devastation visited on Indigenous people in the making of America — of the making of that promise for some as the cost of devastation for others. Aztec Dance, a conversation between a mother and daughter, evokes the horrors of colonial conquest: Montezuma and Cuauhtémoc are in their graves/ And our people of the valley of Mexico … were enslaved — and brings its accumulation of pain into the present: 'Ma, they call us 'greaser', they call us 'wetback'/ Here in this land that once was ours.' Adelita, an exquisite song, honours the soldaderas, the women fighters of the Mexican Revolution. The singer is a grieving husband: Adelita, my love, Adelita, my wife Adelita, my comrade, my life They'll remember your name when freedom fills the Sierranea. Ciudad Juarez is the story of a father in the agonies of grief. His daughter has disappeared in a city where the sun regularly rises over women's bodies dumped in the desert. She vanished into the streets of the city of death the city of my lost heart Ciudad Juarez Springsteen is clear about the circuits of exchange driving the violence: The drugs flow north across the river the guns flow south the blood flows here from the devil's mouth Trump gives us a video that could have been made by Beavis and Butt-Head. Springsteen gives us Inyo, a record suffused with beauty, grace and deep empathy for lives lived on both sides of the border. Richard Pithouse is distinguished research fellow at the Global Centre for Advanced Studies, an international research scholar at the University of Connecticut and professor at large at the University of the Western Cape.

Mkhwanazi doing well after week of police 'crisis': KZN premier Ntuli
Mkhwanazi doing well after week of police 'crisis': KZN premier Ntuli

The Herald

time12 hours ago

  • The Herald

Mkhwanazi doing well after week of police 'crisis': KZN premier Ntuli

Ntuli also condemned the actions of some lobby groups who were stopping the provision of services at hospitals and clinics in the province. 'The problem of undocumented foreign nationals is serious hence as government we are trying to understand the extent of the problem and why it's easy to get into South Africa. I have already been to the border between South Africa and Mozambique and have a clear sense of how there is an influx of foreigners coming into the country.' It was necessary for lobby groups not to break the law in addressing the issue of illegal foreigners, he said. In May Ntuli and Mkhwanazi, together with department of labour and home affairs officials, raided a KwaDukuza textile factory which was said to be employing more than 300 undocumented workers. The crackdown resulted in the arrest of 179 people. It also transpired that 158 people did not have permits to be in the country. The owner of the factory was arrested and charged for violating immigration and labour laws. The company, which has been in operation for more than 25 years, was a supplier to reputable retail clothing outlets, Ntuli said, adding that the move was aimed at protecting the provincial economy. TimesLIVE

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