Meyer, Max do battle to lead the DA

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Meyer, Max do battle to lead the DA
January 30 2015 at 11:34am
By Warda Meyer

Cape Town - The battle-lines have been drawn in the Western Cape DA’s leadership race, with the DA MPL Lennit Max confirming that he will oppose the incumbent, Ivan Meyer, when it goes to a vote at the party’s provincial congress in March.

With applications closing on February 13, Max and Meyer said they have thrown their names into the hat for the party leader position.

Human Settlements MEC Bonginkosi Madikizela said he would run for deputy provincial leader and Anton Bredell, the incumbent party chairman in the province, said he would also stand for re-election.

But all eyes will be on party stalwart Theuns Botha, the incumbent deputy leader, to see if he would run for re-election.

Botha is dealing with a serious health issue and will undergo major surgery next week.

He is expected back in the fold only at the end of May.

Rumours about the two-man leadership race has caused a stir throughout the DA’s structures as members discuss their preferred candidate.

Meyer and Max were equally confident of a victory, each saying they were enjoying the majority of support.

The previous DA leadership race saw Meyer, Botha and Bredell being elected unopposed to lead the party in the Western Cape.

But this time the table is set for a gruelling leadership race, with heavy lobbying before the party’s elective congress, which is expected to be held in Goodwood.

Max conceded that “unfounded allegations of marital infidelity” harmed his political career when he entered the DA’s leadership race in 2010, and he failed to make the cut.

“Last time around in 2010 there was an assertive attempt to discredit me. There was a dark cloud hanging over my head and I was powerless to defend myself. But the matter has gone to court and I’ve never been found guilty of anything,” he said.

Max said that after spending more than three years on the back benches of the national assembly, he has taken up his new role as member of the Western Cape legislature while rebuilding his reputation.

“It is difficult to come back from the damage done to my reputation, but I’ve never been found guilty, and as a result I instituted legal action to clear my name.”

And he warned that he will not hesitate to take legal action against anyone who intends using the “unfounded past allegations” to discredit him in the upcoming race.

“It’s an old story, a story I’ve denied from the very beginning, and those who know me will never believe it,” he added.

But he conceded that it could be a close race, depending on who will be in the running.


Meyer, who said he was on a path to help lead the DA straight into the Union Buildings, was confident in his support base.

He said he was sure his track record and proven leadership qualities during the past term would make him the front-runner.

“I have not yet submitted my application, but I will definitely stand again as leader. I have widespread support amongst the mayors in the province, constituency head and the cabinet.”


Sources close to the provincial parliament questioned Max’s motives to become provincial leader, saying he thought it was an automatic ticket to become a cabinet minister or premier once Helen Zille’s term ends.

But Meyer’s critics said Zille herself warned against complacency in the party, and Meyer had become just that.

Another DA insider said: “While he’s busy being Finance MEC, Max has been crisscrossing the province, sharing his vision for the DA with everyone who is willing to listen.”

DA insiders said Max was enjoying the support of a large number of DA members throughout the regions and across the social and racial divide.

“Max has a world of experience in leadership, a people’s person who will be able to fight for DA loyalists, something Meyer has failed over in recent months, particularly with the recent Theuns Botha portfolio-swopping fiasco.”

Others claimed Max and Meyer would not stand a chance if Botha is in the running for the leadership post.


[email protected]

Cape Argus

http://www.iol.co.za/news/politics/meyer-max-do-battle-to-lead-the-da-1.1811210#.VM07Xf10zcu
 
Support for Max in DA leadership race

February 2 2015 at 11:47am
By Warda Meyer

Cape Town - In an unprecedented move, a DA member of the provincial legislature has come out strongly in support of the party leader hopeful, Lennit Max.

Rodney Lentit, a former provincial ID leader and now a member of the DA’s provincial executive committee, officially announced his support for Max to become the next DA provincial leader.

The leadership race started with a bang, with Max announcing he would oppose incumbent Ivan Meyer when it goes to a vote at the party’s provincial congress next month.

The closing date for those who want to enter the leadership race is February 13, but so far it is said to be a race between Max and Meyer.

Human Settlements MEC Bonginkosi Madikizela confirmed he would be running for deputy provincial leader and Anton Bredell, the incumbent chairman of the party, would stand for re-election.

Party insiders said party stalwart Theuns Botha, the incumbent deputy leader, who is scheduled for major surgery this week, would most likely not run for re-election.


Lentit said he had been approached by Meyer and Max for support.

“Both told me that if I am not willing to support them that it will not be held against me by either of them. In the DA we allow the democratic space for leaders to be elected,” Lentit said.

He had informed Meyer of his decision to support Max, who he has known for nearly 12 years.

It was in no way a negative reflection of the work done by Meyer over the past term as leader.

“I am a firm believer in one term leadership to ensure that new blood and new visions are always pumped into the party. This to avoid a one-man party and instead inspire, train and nurture future leaders.”

Cape Argus


http://www.iol.co.za/news/politics/support-for-max-in-da-leadership-race-1.1812201#.VNPrdP10zcs
 
To be honest... if the DA wants to stand a real chance of making it into the union buildings they will need to have a leader of colour. Having a white male at the helm won't help their image much. They need to find a strong person of colour to lead then with a firm hand of they want to lead south Africa.
 
To be honest... if the DA wants to stand a real chance of making it into the union buildings they will need to have a leader of colour. Having a white male at the helm won't help their image much. They need to find a strong person of colour to lead then with a firm hand of they want to lead south Africa.

They appear to have no one in the party at the moment so picking a token person of colour would be even worse for the party. It's better if we all move beyond colour politics in any case - it's time we moved from struggle politics to issue politics.
 
They appear to have no one in the party at the moment so picking a token person of colour would be even worse for the party. It's better if we all move beyond colour politics in any case - it's time we moved from struggle politics to issue politics.

Maimane, maybe? He could have a go at it in 2019.

So far he's done quite well to focus on issues. Even during this whole Parliamentary debacle he's stayed on message about the issues at hand.
 
Maimane, maybe? He could have a go at it in 2019.

So far he's done quite well to focus on issues. Even during this whole Parliamentary debacle he's stayed on message about the issues at hand.

But is he the best man for the job? I don't think he'd be ready in 2019, but the idea of grooming him for leadership over the long run may work.
 
But is he the best man for the job? I don't think he'd be ready in 2019, but the idea of grooming him for leadership over the long run may work.

He could be, I think. Presidents are mostly figureheads, anyway. He's got charisma and a certain presentability.

Strikes me that he is being groomed anyway, even if it is for a Premiership or somesuch.
 
Meyer and Max are both men of colour. Though this is a contest for the Western Cape leadership, not the national leadership.

I feel pretty certain that Zille is trying to prime Maimane to take over. But not this year. The Federal Congress is in may, that is just 3 months from now. Maimane will probably run at the next one in 2017 or something like that.
 
The DA is doing itself no favours with its white candidates. Whether they are competent or not is irrelevent, the majority of the people in this country will not vote a white person into power any time soon. Maimane seems legit, so I say give the guy a chance.

Edit. I see they're both coloured. That will secure them the Western Cape but if they want to expand they need highly visible black leaders.
 
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I feel pretty certain that Zille is trying to prime Maimane to take over. But not this year. The Federal Congress is in may, that is just 3 months from now. Maimane will probably run at the next one in 2017 or something like that.
GvO has already destroyed him beyond recovery. Malema&EFF have "protected" him from the ANC in Parliament. He's been instructed to go back and reject the Parliament "peace offering" Ramaphosa had extended, proving beyond doubt that he has no power within the Party.

With all this in mind, as well as considering the "great minds" within the DA, expensive political strategists/consultants employed to give the Party direction, as well as the very donors themselves who give the party so much money, I cannot believe they would even consider such a mistake.

The DA needs to coax a clean, senior male figure of authority once linked to the ANC but is now critical of it. Bring him into the DA and spend lots of money on him. HArd to find but possible (I won't make any suggestions, but I could if Helen PMs me and drops a chunk of money :D)

The Maimanes, Gana, Mazibuko etc can be dangled to the electorate as Ministers of key porfolios(no more than that) assuming they get into power.

You're whispering into the ears of Thuli Madonsela&Vusi Pikoli right now, not such a bad idea to have them in there too.

Missed th etrick already with Lekota&Holomisa, but bending over backwards to include them too won't be such a bad idea.

Get all this figure in plus that one big name up top, and DA can start being relevant again in South African politics. As things stand it's an ANC&EFF show, and no matter how som eof the journalists try to accomodate DA, they simply can't resisted yielding more space to those guys.

I have never come across a country with an opposition party, the leading opposition party with 20%+ votes beign this irrelevant politics wise. Even if I put on my neutral cap, I'm seriously embarassed on behalf of that party.
 
Things just got more interesting

De Lille to stand for Western Cape DA leader


Sapa | 09 februari, 2015 12:07

Cape Town mayor Patricia De Lille announced that she would be standing for the position of Democratic Alliance leader in the Western Cape.

"I am pleased to announce that I'm standing to be leader of the DA in the Western Cape," she wrote on social networking site Twitter.

"I'm standing with Anton Bredell as the nominee for chairperson, and Bonginkosi Madikizela as nominee for deputy leader."

The DA in the province is expected to hold its elective conference next month.

The province was currently led by Ivan Meyer, who will reportedly stand for a second term.

De Lille, who was a former Pan Africanist Congress MP, formed her own political party in 2003 called the Independent Democrats.

Seven years later, in 2010, the ID merged with the DA and De Lille took dual membership. Her party was finally dissolved in May last year.

http://www.timeslive.co.za/politics/2015/02/09/de-lille-to-stand-for-western-cape-da-leader
 
De Lille to stand for Western Cape DA leader


Sapa | 09 februari, 2015 12:07

Cape Town mayor Patricia De Lille announced that she would be standing for the position of Democratic Alliance leader in the Western Cape.

"I am pleased to announce that I'm standing to be leader of the DA in the Western Cape," she wrote on social networking site Twitter.

"I'm standing with Anton Bredell as the nominee for chairperson, and Bonginkosi Madikizela as nominee for deputy leader."

The DA in the province is expected to hold its elective conference next month.

The province was currently led by Ivan Meyer, who will reportedly stand for a second term.

De Lille, who was a former Pan Africanist Congress MP, formed her own political party in 2003 called the Independent Democrats.

Seven years later, in 2010, the ID merged with the DA and De Lille took dual membership. Her party was finally dissolved in May last year.

http://www.timeslive.co.za/politics/2015/02/09/de-lille-to-stand-for-western-cape-da-leader

This Auntie has my support/vote...
 
DA,WC(&CT) - where women rule the roost! Only way DA men can be macho is on forums such as these. :D

Take that with a pinch of salt
 
Maimane would make a great leader. He's young, but he is very smart and mature.
 
Maimane would make a great leader. He's young, but he is very smart and mature.
You mean he does what he's told? Makes deal with Ramaphosa, next day he's instructed to go back on his word and he does that. If that's the kind of leader you mean then yes, he would make a great one.

People seem to be underplaying that but that move tainted Maimane as a blind puppet and he knows it. I think personally he felt upset he was made to do that after making a perfect deal. Right now he probably believes he was right. No way Malema&EFF would've done what they are going to do now becasue the deal was designed to revent such.

By forcing Maimane what have his baases achieved - "putting spotlight back onto EFF because ANC panicking about SONA tried to change Parly rules which gave EFF a lot of media coverage and voter sympathy. Now EFF has a countdown which not even the breakaway nonsense&GaytonThug can reduce the impact of. No one is looking forward to what Zuma will say at all."

Maimane was right to take Cyril's deal, and those who told him otherwise were wrong. That probably hurts him the most. Instead we would all have been talking about what Zuma said or failed to say, while people (including me) would've been looking to hear what the DA "fundis" have to say abut his policies as well as DA/Zille newsletters. Now it's all a ZUMA-ANC&Malema-EFF show!
 
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You mean he does what he's told? Makes deal with Ramaphosa, next day he's instructed to go back on his word and he does that. If that's the kind of leader you mean then yes, he would make a great one.

People seem to be underplaying that but that move tainted Maimane as a blind puppet and he knows it. I think personally he felt upset he was made to do that after making a perfect deal. Right now he probably believes he was right. No way Malema&EFF would've done what they are going to do now becasue the deal was designed to revent such.

By forcing Maimane what have his baases achieved - "putting spotlight back onto EFF because ANC panicking about SONA tried to change Parly rules which gave EFF a lot of media coverage and voter sympathy. Now EFF has a countdown which not even the breakaway nonsense&GaytonThug can reduce the impact of. No one is looking forward to what Zuma will say at all."

Maimane was right to take Cyril's deal, and those who told him otherwise were wrong. That probably hurts him the most. Instead we would all have been talking about what Zuma said or failed to say, while people (including me) would've been looking to hear what the DA "fundis" have to say abut his policies as well as DA/Zille newsletters. Now it's all a ZUMA-ANC&Malema-EFF show!

This is technically off topic, but are you serious here? DA and Maimane should have agreed with Cyril's call to leave Zuma alone? Because that is what he demanded. That they stop trying to bring him to acccount over Nkandla or his other corruption charges.

I for one do not believe Maimane was ever foolish enough to accept such a request. The deal was misrepresented.
 
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