Cape Town is fighting the national government over a new law that centralizes control of how cities buy goods and services. The city says this law slows down emergency responses, cuts out local suppliers, and adds too much red tape, hurting local decisionmaking and public involvement. Cape Town argues the law breaks the Constitution’s promise to keep local governments independent and able to act quickly for their communities. The case now before the Constitutional Court will decide if cities like Cape Town can keep control or must follow strict national rules that may make governance slower and less flexible. This battle is about more than rules—it’s about the future of local democracy in South Africa.
In South Africa, a big fuss has erupted over a tender worth R898 million for new driver’s licence card machines, awarded to a French company called Idemia Security. This controversy was sparked when the AuditorGeneral found irregularities in the tender process, leading Transport Minister Barbara Creecy to pause the rollout. Many, especially the Democratic Alliance party, are calling for complete transparency and major reforms to tackle the mismanagement in the Department of Transport. This situation reflects deeper issues in the government that need to be fixed to regain public trust.