Maimane versus James

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The top two candidates for the position of DA leader, Mmusi Maimane and Wilmot James, expressed differing opinions on certain pertinent rights issues during a televised debate on Monday night.

A section of the 30-minute debate, which aired on kykNet, was spent discussing their stances on the death penalty, the judicial system, gay rights and the role of religion.

Rapport editor and Insig presenter Waldimar Pelser questioned James, who is currently the party's federal leader, on comments he made to the Sunday Times that bail should be denied for rape accused, and how that could be defended from a liberal perspective.

"Bail is not punitive... What I would recommend is to make the default condition in violent crime that bail is not provided unless the accused and the defence can make a case for bail to be granted and the judge makes the final decision," James responded.

Pelser said the granting of bail was a basic right in the Bill of Rights, and James agreed.

James said in the Sunday Times that bail should be denied "because the chance of a repeat is so grave, especially in a country like ours..."

Maimane, who is the party's parliamentary leader, responded on Monday that South Africans "get accused of too many things".

"Make no mistake, there have been many people who have had allegations against them. It is our Constitutional right that once the allegation has been made, you are innocent until proven guilty," he said.

Death penalty

Maimane was then questioned over comments he made over the possibility of a referendum on the death penalty.

"If the people want to vote on it, the people must vote on it," he said, adding that he did not agree with the penalty, however it was the democratic right of people to voice their opinions.

James said Maimane did not understand the Constitution or the Bill of Rights.

"The Bill of Rights, which has the right to life... cannot be changed by a vote in Parliament, it cannot be subject to a referendum," he said.

Maimane disagreed.

"The ultimate right that at least is given to the people of this country is that it is always their voice that must be given expression."

Religion

Maimane was asked by Pelser if God spoke to him on how he lead the party in Parliament.

"It's important, it's my own personal choice... I still maintain my faith. It is something I must practice - I am entitled to do so," he responded.

"There is a generalised view that if you have religion, you cannot be liberal, which I think is dangerous. I think the issue here is that I have a personal conviction... but I also understand that my faith is subject to the laws of this country."

Pelser asked Maimane about Liberty Church, where he is a preacher, and how he could reconcile its stance against gay marriage with the rights enshrined in the Constitution.

"Our church does not prescribe the laws to the country, its government. I don't agree with everything that is said in our church, but the right exists for them to say that."

James said there was a strict separation between church and state.

"There is no contradiction between being religious and being a liberal democrat. The choice is the individual's choice," he said.

Helen Zille

Both commented on outgoing party leader Helen Zille and how she helped the party to grow.

"She captained a very good team," Maimane said.

"We are here to elect a new captain, and the team will take it forward."

James said he had initially wanted Zille to stay as leader into the forthcoming local government elections.

"She is the party's biggest brand when it comes to good governance," he said.

Maimane said he was going to build a version of the party that was more consistent and did not "flip-flop" in its stance on important issues.

"We flip-flop on issues, we support the NDP [National Development Plan] then we don't. We support redress, then we vote for bills that are racist fundamentally. That is not what I'm trying to build. I'm trying to build a party that is consistent," he said.

‘Racist’ bill

Maimane's comment was in response to a question initially asked to James by Pelser on the party initially voting for the Employment Equity Act Amendment Bill in Parliament, only to say it was mistake, and the party's relationship with the NDP.

"We are becoming an alternate ANC under the current leadership and I aim to set that right," James said.

Maimane said he was not in Parliament when the decision was made to vote for the "racist" bill.

"It was an error on our part. We should not have supported a bill that articulates quotas. What we should be doing is going back to our principles."

James agreed that the party was wrong in voting for the bill.

‘New vision’

Maimane said he wanted to create a party that communicated a new vision for the country.

"We have to be the party that communicates the vision for South Africa. Historically we have been a party that communicates what we stand against, how we oppose the ANC. Now the function is to articulate a vision for tomorrow."

James said he had the ability and courage to lead the party in a new direction that focused on communicating with voters.

"[This is] on the basis of being a principled party, of being a unified party, being a growing party, being a party with new ideas and a winning party."

At the end of the debate both then tackled a question from a Twitter user on whether public disagreements between two DA leaders would confuse voters about the party's general stance.

Maimane said the best thing about the DA was that members could disagree with each other.

"I think it's important as a demonstration of democracy. I can take this party forward regardless of the divisions that some seem to suggest are there."

James said: "When I win on Sunday, I will expect Mr Maimane to unite behind me. And if he wins I will unite behind him."

Maimane had the last word with a quick "see you on Sunday".

The new party leader would be elected at the federal congress in Nelson Mandela Bay at the weekend.

News24 - http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/Maimane-James-differ-on-certain-rights-issues-20150505
 
So the question is do you want James (who comes across a lot smarter and experienced) to lead the party and properly challenge the ANC...

...or do you want the charismatic and likable people person that is Maimane to lead and steal votes from the ANC.

Methinks at this point in time the most important thing is to lessen (may e even level out) the ANC's voter base and get two more or less equally powerful and supported parties in parliament.
 
So the question is do you want James (who comes across a lot smarter and experienced) to lead the party and properly challenge the ANC...

...or do you want the charismatic and likable people person that is Maimane to lead and steal votes from the ANC.

Methinks at this point in time the most important thing is to lessen (may e even level out) the ANC's voter base and get two more or less equally powerful and supported parties in parliament.

The DA cannot become an ANC lite, or mere protest party. If it stays true to its liberal roots it will continue to grow and retain its identity.
 
The DA cannot become an ANC lite, or mere protest party. If it stays true to its liberal roots it will continue to grow and retain its identity.
Nd if it grows too slow? You have all these "born frees" that will be eligible to vote for the first time come next election, surely you want to grab their votes ASAP?
 
Nd if it grows too slow? You have all these "born frees" that will be eligible to vote for the first time come next election, surely you want to grab their votes ASAP?

If the party abandons its principles for votes it will lose its identity. A political party needs to stand for something.
 
So the question is do you want James (who comes across a lot smarter and experienced) to lead the party and properly challenge the ANC...

...or do you want the charismatic and likable people person that is Maimane to lead and steal votes from the ANC.

Methinks at this point in time the most important thing is to lessen (may e even level out) the ANC's voter base and get two more or less equally powerful and supported parties in parliament.

I would prefer the latter. Maimane might be young and inexperienced, but he's smart. He will learn quickly and I'm sure he will lead the party further and grow it by attracting ANC votes.
 
I would prefer the latter. Maimane might be young and inexperienced, but he's smart. He will learn quickly and I'm sure he will lead the party further and grow it by attracting ANC votes.
Agreed
 
As traditional white voter, I really hope that Maimane wins. I would love to go and hear his talks. I think this is a great time for SA. He might be young but like Obama when he was here his speech was interesting, not like all the other Parties heads.

For not knowing much about James I also enjoyed his stance ( Debate although I forgot to watch ). Great times for DA politics.
 
They need votes too

Yes. But if they gain those votes they will want to hold onto them. The DA will end up irrevocably changed with very little between them and the ANC.
 
Yes. But if they gain those votes they will want to hold onto them. The DA will end up irrevocably changed with very little between them and the ANC.

I doubt that very much. Maimane would be an excellent leader and he wouldn't turn the DA into a new ANC.
 
Maimane is not yet ready to lead DA still immature to be a leader of political party, maybe after 6 years he can be a leader, if I was a DA person I would vote for James.
 
After this, there is no way I'd vote for Maimane. You cannot democratise constitutional issues. You also cannot democratise international human rights. Coming from a liberal party member it is quite shocking.
 
Im excited for this weekend. Going to congress to elect Mmusi :D Sorry James, you dont stand a chance. Mmusi is a great leader with powerful grass root support.
 
After this, there is no way I'd vote for Maimane. You cannot democratise constitutional issues. You also cannot democratise international human rights. Coming from a liberal party member it is quite shocking.

It seems crazy to me too. As I said in the other thread:

Musi seems to have come out ahead. He didn't
go much into policies though, choosing to say
that the people should decide. James seems to
be better on policy, but comes across as a back
room strategist, not the face of the party.
Musi dodged the Michelle Bachman question well
(Does God speak to you?). He and James agree
that there is a separation between party and
state and church and state. Musi says that he
doesn't agree with everything that his church
teaches, such as that gay marriages don't exist. I
can understand this to an extent, but he's not
merely a member. He is a preacher at the church
too.
He says that the DA flip flops, and gave good
examples, but his referendum ideas make no
sense. He supports a referendum on the death
penalty, but says that while if people want one
they should vote on gay marriage, but that it
won't do anything as there are laws to protect it.
The death penalty is illegal as the right to life in
the bill of rights has been found inconsistent with
the death penalty by the Con Court. What would
a referendum on it do?

If we let people vote on these issues we would probably hang everyone accused of a crime and stone gays. How about a referendum on land expropriation?
 
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He seemed a bit confused on that matter, tbh. At one point he mentioned the referendum, and at another point he said they are fundamental rights and cannot be put to popular vote.
 
I would prefer the latter. Maimane might be young and inexperienced, but he's smart. He will learn quickly and I'm sure he will lead the party further and grow it by attracting ANC votes.

Hmmm...so employing NOT the best man for the job is ok now.

See, BEE works wonders if you need it.:D
 
Mmusi will win as the popular leader but appears to offer no substance. I hope they keep James and let him steer strategy and as he (James) said, the DA is in strategic drift and something has to be done about it. I think their strategy to consolidate all of the small parties willing to consolidate was a good one but now they need to go big or go home. They have the WC in the bag, now it's time to go for a metro or two outside the WC. EC seems ripe for the taking with all the infighting in the ANC there.
 
Hmmm...so employing NOT the best man for the job is ok now.
Your version of what the "best man" for the job is highly subjective. What you might look for in a leader is not what other people might look for in a leader.

See, BEE works wonders if you need it.:D
So does white privilege.
 
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