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Visvin Reddy referred to Disciplinary Committee over 'Pemmy must go' outburst in Parliament
Visvin Reddy referred to Disciplinary Committee over 'Pemmy must go' outburst in Parliament

IOL News

time02-07-2025

  • Politics
  • IOL News

Visvin Reddy referred to Disciplinary Committee over 'Pemmy must go' outburst in Parliament

Powers and Privileges Committee acts on Visvin Reddy's conduct, referring him to the Disciplinary Committee. He was was ejected from the National Assembly after leading chants for Minister Majodina's resignation amid national water concerns. The Powers and Privileges Committee has referred MK Party Member of Parliament (MP) Visvin Reddy to Parliament's Disciplinary Committee following his conduct during a heated National Assembly (NA) sitting on March 4, 2025. This comes after Reddy was ordered to leave the chamber for repeatedly shouting, 'Pemmy must go,' in a call for Water Minister Pemmy Majodina's removal amid a worsening national water crisis. The committee, chaired by Weziwe Tikana-Gxotiwe, said that while Reddy's conduct did not constitute contempt of Parliament under Section 12 of the Powers, Privileges and Immunities of Parliament and Provincial Legislatures Act, it did amount to misconduct. Tikana-Gxotiwe said the matter was referred to the committee by the Speaker of the National Assembly (NA) in terms of rule 214 of the NA Rules. ' 'The committee will table its report to the NA for consideration.''

Powers and Privileges Committee Refers Mr Visvin Reddy's Matter to Parliamentary Disciplinary Committee
Powers and Privileges Committee Refers Mr Visvin Reddy's Matter to Parliamentary Disciplinary Committee

Zawya

time02-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Zawya

Powers and Privileges Committee Refers Mr Visvin Reddy's Matter to Parliamentary Disciplinary Committee

The Powers and Privileges Committee this afternoon resolved to refer the matter, at the request of the Speaker of the National Assembly (NA), relating to the conduct of Mr Visvin Reddy during the sitting of the 4 March 2025, to Parliament's Disciplinary Committee. The committee agreed that although Mr Reddy's actions do not constitute contempt of Parliament as per Section 12 of the Powers, Privileges and Immunities of Parliament and Provincial Legislatures Act, his actions do constitute misconduct. The matter was referred to the committee by the Speaker of the National Assembly in terms of rule 214 of the NA Rules. The committee will table its report to the NA for consideration. The committee also considered another matter referred by the Speaker relating to the conduct of Mr Marlon Daniels on 2 April 2025. The committee resolved to proceed with a formal inquiry to determine, through oral evidence, whether Mr Daniels' actions constituted contempt of Parliament in terms of the Act and NA Rules. Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Republic of South Africa: The Parliament.

Residents suffer as eThekwini Municipality diverts water to industries
Residents suffer as eThekwini Municipality diverts water to industries

IOL News

time08-05-2025

  • Politics
  • IOL News

Residents suffer as eThekwini Municipality diverts water to industries

MKP Parliament member Visvin Reddy (right) and African Democratic Change eThekwini councillor Niel Patchapen ( left) led a water protest in Queensburgh Image: supplied Umkhonto weSizwe Party member of Parliament, Visvin Reddy, and African Democratic Change eThekwini Municipality councillor, Niel Patchapen, have accused the City of prioritising profit over the lives of Queensburgh and Shallcross residents by diverting 70% of water meant for residential areas to industries in the area. The two leaders recently led a protest at the gate of several industries south west of the City demanding that the City reduce water supply to companies and distribute it evenly. Reddy, a former eThekwini councillor, said the water crisis in Queensburgh, Northdene, Malvern, Escombe, Shallcross, and surrounding areas has reached catastrophic levels – and the truth can no longer be hidden that corporate greed, municipal negligence, and political betrayal are to blame. 'For close to 300 days, residents have had no consistent water supply. They rely on erratic and often non-existent water tankers, while watching a certain company's new plant consume over 50% of the entire area's water – a fact recently confirmed by Head of Water, Ednick Msweli. This is a grotesque injustice that exposes the eThekwini Municipality's shocking failure to prioritize its people,' said Reddy He said among the hardest hit are vulnerable institutions like Cheshire Homes, where residents living with disabilities have been left to suffer in undignified conditions with no water, adding this is more than neglect but a shameful indictment of a city administration that has lost its soul. 'The municipality instead of protecting the people chose to protect profits. The MK Party stands firmly with the Northdene Water Crisis Committee and calls for Immediate rationing of water to industries and accountability for those who approved this reckless expansion,' concludes Reddy. Councillor Patchapen said this is not just a water crisis, it is a moral crisis where the poor are being sacrificed so the rich can profit. This is a betrayal of the highest order, and the silence of the eThekwini coalition government is complicit in the suffering. 'We say no more. eThekwini belongs to its people, not to corporate interests. As a PR councillor representing the residents of Northdene, Queensburgh, Escombe, Malvern, Shallcross, Chatsworth, and surrounding areas—I am compelled to speak out against what appears to be the commercialisation of a basic human right: water,' said Patchapen. The councillor called for an independent audit of water infrastructure, consumption, capacity, and leak-related losses across affected suburbs as well as an immediate moratorium on further industrial use of the reservoir until residential needs are met. 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 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. Next Stay Close ✕

The VAT betrayal: How South Africa's political charlatans sold out the people
The VAT betrayal: How South Africa's political charlatans sold out the people

IOL News

time30-04-2025

  • Business
  • IOL News

The VAT betrayal: How South Africa's political charlatans sold out the people

Visvin Reddy Image: Tumi Pakkies/ Independent Newspapers WHEN the African National Congress (ANC) announced plans to increase Value-Added Tax (VAT) in 2025, it struck a dagger into the heart of every struggling South African. VAT — a tax that punishes the poor for simply surviving — was once again being weaponised to protect the rich and punish the working class. Today, the so-called "leaders" of South Africa's political parties stand exposed, naked before the nation, stripped of their empty rhetoric and false promises. The VAT saga has laid bare their treachery, their hypocrisy, and their unforgivable betrayal of the very people they swore to serve. The Real Impact of VAT on the Poor Let's be clear: VAT is not just another tax. It is a tax on survival. When government raises VAT, it increases the price of bread, milk, school shoes, and bus fare — essentials that millions of South Africans already struggle to afford. VAT doesn't ask if you are rich or poor. It strikes hardest at the empty pockets of the working class, pensioners, and the unemployed. In a country where over 18 million people depend on social grants, unemployment has soared to over 32%, more than 55% of citizens live below the poverty line, a VAT increase is economic violence. And yet, knowing all this, the ANC still proposed a VAT increase of up to 3% in internal discussions — a brutal attack on the most vulnerable. Only a massive public outcry and the ANC's weakened position in Parliament — thanks largely to the rise of the MK Party — forced them to reduce the immediate increase to 0.5%. If Not for MK, VAT Would Have Increased Without a Fight Had the ANC still held its old majority, the VAT increase would have sailed through Parliament unchallenged. Let the nation remember this: It was the entry of the MK Party into Parliament that weakened the ANC's iron grip. It was the voice of the masses, echoed by MK MPs, that forced this government to at least slow down its assault on the even then, the betrayal was only beginning. The Fiscal Framework Farce When the Fiscal Framework, the blueprint for government spending, including the VAT increase, came before Parliament, the ANC desperately needed allies. They found them among parties that had loudly campaigned against the ANC, sworn never to work with the ANC, and claimed to stand for the people. Yet when the moment of truth arrived, ActionSA, BOSA (Build One South Africa), Rise Mzansi, Gayton Mackenzie's Patriotic Alliance, and others stood not with the people. but with the ANC. In a narrow vote, the Fiscal Framework was adopted, giving life to the VAT increase. These so-called opposition parties handed the ANC a knife and pointed it at the neck of the poor. ActionSA, a party that had thundered against ANC corruption and mismanagement, voted for the ANC's Fiscal Framework. BOSA, led by the so-called "new hope" Mmusi Maimane, voted with the ANC. Rise Mzansi, the party that brands itself as the future, voted for a future with higher VAT and deeper poverty. Gayton Mackenzie, who styles himself as a man of the people, handed the ANC the majority it needed. The Great Lie: "The Fiscal Framework Had Nothing to Do with VAT" When caught, these parties scrambled to spin a narrative so ridiculous it insults the intelligence of every South African. They claimed: "We voted for the Fiscal Framework, but it had nothing to do with VAT. "Lies. Blatant, shameless lies. The Fiscal Framework explicitly includes the assumptions and parameters for government revenue — including the VAT increase. It is the foundational document that dictates taxes, spending, and borrowing. Without the Fiscal Framework being adopted, the VAT increase had no legislative path forward. Today, the Western Cape High Court confirmed what any honest politician already knew: The Fiscal Framework contained the VAT increase. The court set aside the adoption of the Framework and suspended the VAT hike, exposing the lies told to the people. The spin has failed. The betrayal stands naked before us. The Reality Voters Must Never Forget South Africans must remember this treachery. Remember that these parties made public pledges and broke them when it mattered most. Remember that in the corridors of Parliament, when faced with a choice between standing with the people or kneeling before the ANC, they chose to kneel. They are not opposition parties. They are political charlatans. They are the ANC's convenient enablers, eager for scraps from the table of power. The tragedy of South Africa is not just a corrupt ruling party. It is an entire political class — old and new — that talks revolution during elections but practices betrayal in Parliament. A Systemic Betrayal This is not a once-off event. It is a symptom of a deeper sickness: A political elite more interested in self-preservation than public service. A culture of spin doctors, legal loopholes, and manufactured consent. An economy managed for the rich, subsidised by the poor. And VAT is just the beginning. Behind every act of betrayal today lurks the threat of more taxes on the working class, more protection for monopolies and billionaires, and more lies dressed up as governance. MK Party: A Different Road In this sea of betrayal, the MK Party has stood firm. From the outset, MK MPs opposed the Fiscal Framework, exposed the hidden VAT increase, and demanded that the burden of fixing the economy be placed where it belongs: on the backs of the wealthy, not the poor. Tax the billionaires. Tax the monopolies. Nationalise key industries. Use the wealth of the country for its people, not for its elite. That is the road to freedom. Not endless VAT hikes. Not squeezing pensioners and single mothers to please global markets and local oligarchs. The Final Verdict: Voters Must Choose South Africa is at a crossroads. The mask has slipped. The lies have been exposed. In the next election — and every election to come — South Africans must remember who voted for higher VAT. They must remember who lied to them. And they must punish every political party and every political opportunist who chose betrayal over bravery. Never again must we vote for cowards in nice suits. Never again must we trust smooth talkers who sell us out behind closed doors. Never again must we allow political charlatans to dictate the destiny of our children. The VAT saga is a warning. Let us heed it. DAILY NEWS

The VAT betrayal: How South Africa's political charlatans sold out the people
The VAT betrayal: How South Africa's political charlatans sold out the people

IOL News

time30-04-2025

  • Business
  • IOL News

The VAT betrayal: How South Africa's political charlatans sold out the people

Visvin Reddy Image: Tumi Pakkies/ Independent Newspapers WHEN the African National Congress (ANC) announced plans to increase Value-Added Tax (VAT) in 2025, it struck a dagger into the heart of every struggling South African. VAT — a tax that punishes the poor for simply surviving — was once again being weaponised to protect the rich and punish the working class. Today, the so-called "leaders" of South Africa's political parties stand exposed, naked before the nation, stripped of their empty rhetoric and false promises. The VAT saga has laid bare their treachery, their hypocrisy, and their unforgivable betrayal of the very people they swore to serve. The Real Impact of VAT on the Poor Let's be clear: VAT is not just another tax. It is a tax on survival. When government raises VAT, it increases the price of bread, milk, school shoes, and bus fare — essentials that millions of South Africans already struggle to afford. VAT doesn't ask if you are rich or poor. It strikes hardest at the empty pockets of the working class, pensioners, and the unemployed. In a country where over 18 million people depend on social grants, unemployment has soared to over 32%, more than 55% of citizens live below the poverty line, a VAT increase is economic violence. And yet, knowing all this, the ANC still proposed a VAT increase of up to 3% in internal discussions — a brutal attack on the most vulnerable. Only a massive public outcry and the ANC's weakened position in Parliament — thanks largely to the rise of the MK Party — forced them to reduce the immediate increase to 0.5%. If Not for MK, VAT Would Have Increased Without a Fight Had the ANC still held its old majority, the VAT increase would have sailed through Parliament unchallenged. Let the nation remember this: It was the entry of the MK Party into Parliament that weakened the ANC's iron grip. It was the voice of the masses, echoed by MK MPs, that forced this government to at least slow down its assault on the even then, the betrayal was only beginning. 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 ✕ The Fiscal Framework Farce When the Fiscal Framework, the blueprint for government spending, including the VAT increase, came before Parliament, the ANC desperately needed allies. They found them among parties that had loudly campaigned against the ANC, sworn never to work with the ANC, and claimed to stand for the people. Yet when the moment of truth arrived, ActionSA, BOSA (Build One South Africa), Rise Mzansi, Gayton Mackenzie's Patriotic Alliance, and others stood not with the people. but with the ANC. In a narrow vote, the Fiscal Framework was adopted, giving life to the VAT increase. These so-called opposition parties handed the ANC a knife and pointed it at the neck of the poor. ActionSA, a party that had thundered against ANC corruption and mismanagement, voted for the ANC's Fiscal Framework. BOSA, led by the so-called "new hope" Mmusi Maimane, voted with the ANC. Rise Mzansi, the party that brands itself as the future, voted for a future with higher VAT and deeper poverty. Gayton Mackenzie, who styles himself as a man of the people, handed the ANC the majority it needed. The Great Lie: "The Fiscal Framework Had Nothing to Do with VAT" When caught, these parties scrambled to spin a narrative so ridiculous it insults the intelligence of every South African. They claimed: "We voted for the Fiscal Framework, but it had nothing to do with VAT. "Lies. Blatant, shameless lies. The Fiscal Framework explicitly includes the assumptions and parameters for government revenue — including the VAT increase. It is the foundational document that dictates taxes, spending, and borrowing. Without the Fiscal Framework being adopted, the VAT increase had no legislative path forward. Today, the Western Cape High Court confirmed what any honest politician already knew: The Fiscal Framework contained the VAT increase. The court set aside the adoption of the Framework and suspended the VAT hike, exposing the lies told to the people. The spin has failed. The betrayal stands naked before us. The Reality Voters Must Never Forget South Africans must remember this treachery. Remember that these parties made public pledges and broke them when it mattered most. Remember that in the corridors of Parliament, when faced with a choice between standing with the people or kneeling before the ANC, they chose to kneel. They are not opposition parties. They are political charlatans. They are the ANC's convenient enablers, eager for scraps from the table of power. The tragedy of South Africa is not just a corrupt ruling party. It is an entire political class — old and new — that talks revolution during elections but practices betrayal in Parliament. A Systemic Betrayal This is not a once-off event. It is a symptom of a deeper sickness: A political elite more interested in self-preservation than public service. A culture of spin doctors, legal loopholes, and manufactured consent. An economy managed for the rich, subsidised by the poor. And VAT is just the beginning. Behind every act of betrayal today lurks the threat of more taxes on the working class, more protection for monopolies and billionaires, and more lies dressed up as governance. MK Party: A Different Road In this sea of betrayal, the MK Party has stood firm. From the outset, MK MPs opposed the Fiscal Framework, exposed the hidden VAT increase, and demanded that the burden of fixing the economy be placed where it belongs: on the backs of the wealthy, not the poor. Tax the billionaires. Tax the monopolies. Nationalise key industries. Use the wealth of the country for its people, not for its elite. That is the road to freedom. Not endless VAT hikes. Not squeezing pensioners and single mothers to please global markets and local oligarchs. The Final Verdict: Voters Must Choose South Africa is at a crossroads. The mask has slipped. The lies have been exposed. In the next election — and every election to come — South Africans must remember who voted for higher VAT. They must remember who lied to them. And they must punish every political party and every political opportunist who chose betrayal over bravery. Never again must we vote for cowards in nice suits. Never again must we trust smooth talkers who sell us out behind closed doors. Never again must we allow political charlatans to dictate the destiny of our children. The VAT saga is a warning. Let us heed it. DAILY NEWS

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