National Assembly of South Africa

Last updated

National Assembly

Name in official languages
28th Parliament
Type
Type
Leadership
Thoko Didiza, ANC
since 14 June 2024
Annelie Lotriet, DA
since 14 June 2024
Paul Mashatile, ANC
since 7 March 2023
John Hlophe, MK
since 25 June 2024
Structure
Seats400
South Africa -- National Assembly 2024.svg
Political groups
Government (287)
  •   ANC (159)
  •   DA (87)
  •   IFP (17)
  •   PA (9)
  •   VF+ (6)
  •   UDM (3)
  •   Al Jama-ah (2)
  •   Good (1)
  •   PAC (1)
  •   RISE (2)

Opposition (113) Progressive Caucus (100)

Others (13)

Elections
Closed list proportional representation
First election
15 September 1910
Last election
29 May 2024
Next election
2029
Meeting place
Good Hope Chamber and Cape Town International Convention Centre
Cape Town, South Africa [2] [3]
Website
National Assembly – Parliament of South Africa

The National Assembly is the directly elected house of the Parliament of South Africa, located in Cape Town, Western Cape. It consists of four hundred members who are elected every five years using a party-list proportional representation system where half of the members are elected proportionally from nine provincial lists and the remaining half from national lists so as to restore proportionality.

Contents

The National Assembly is presided over by a Speaker, assisted by a Deputy Speaker. The current speaker as of 14 June 2024 is Thoko Didiza (ANC). [4] The Deputy Speaker is Annelie Lotriet (DA) since 14 June 2024. [5]

The National Assembly chamber was destroyed in a fire in January 2022. [6] National Assembly sittings are now held in the old Good Hope Chamber, which is within the precincts of parliament. [2] [7] [8]

Allocation

The National Assembly seats are allocated using a proportional representation system with closed lists. Seats are first allocated according to the (integer part of the) Droop quota. Thereafter, at most five seats are allocated using the largest remainder method (using the Droop quota). Any additional seats are allocated amongst the parties who then already have seats using the highest averages method.

Voters previously had one vote at elections to the National Assembly, but since the 2024 South African general election voters cast two votes. Seats are allocated in ten multi-member constituencies via party lists. One constituency is a national or 'at large' constituency and nine others represent each of the nine provinces. The lists were called the national lists and regional lists in the 2009 election. 'Regional' was used to avoid confusion with the provincial legislature elections held at the same time. Previously they were called 'National to National' and 'Provincial to National'.

Of the 400 members of the National Assembly, half are assigned to be elected from national lists and the remaining half are assigned to be elected from regional lists. Every election, the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) determines the allocation of the 200 regional list seats to each province by population.

Parties decide whether they want to set up both national and regional lists or only regional lists. In the 2009 election, the Democratic Alliance (DA) chose not to use a national list. The nationwide votes entitled the DA to 67 seats, but the provincial votes amounted to only 35 seats. While normally the remaining 32 members would be drawn from the party's national list, in this case the remaining seats were distributed among the other DA regional list candidates. This resulted in the National Assembly being made up of 168 members elected on national lists and 232 members elected on regional lists.[ citation needed ]

History

The National Assembly was first elected in South Africa's first non-racial election in 1994 with the African National Congress (ANC) winning 252 of the 400 seats. The National Party (NP), the previous governing party, won 82 seats, and the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) won 43. Under the terms of the Interim Constitution this result entitled the NP and the IFP to take part in the Government of National Unity alongside the ANC, and gave the ANC and NP the right to each nominate one Deputy President. The other parties represented in the assembly were the Freedom Front (9 seats), the Democratic Party (7 seats), the Pan Africanist Congress (5 seats), and the African Christian Democratic Party (2 seats).

In the election of 1999, the ANC won 266 seats, one short of the two-thirds majority needed to unilaterally amend the constitution. The DP expanded its representation to become the official opposition with 38 seats, while the IFP won 34. The NP, now renamed the New National Party (NNP), dropped to 28 seats, and the newly formed United Democratic Movement (UDM) won 14. Eight smaller parties also obtained seats in the assembly.

In the election of 2004 the ANC obtained 279 seats, gaining a two-thirds majority and the ability to change the constitution. The DP became the Democratic Alliance (DA) and remained the official opposition with 50 seats, while the IFP won 28 seats. The NNP was severely weakened, obtaining only 7 seats; the party was formally disbanded in 2005 with the majority of the party joining the ANC.

In the election of 2009 the ANC lost its two-thirds majority but remained the majority party with 264 seats. The DA increased its support to 67 seats, and the new Congress of the People (COPE) party, a breakaway from the ANC, obtained 30 seats. The IFP was reduced to 18 seats.

In the election of 2014 the ANC lost further seats, but remained the majority party with 249 seats. The DA increased its support to 89 seats, while the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), a far-left breakaway from the ANC, obtained 25 seats. The IFP further reduced to 10 seats while COPE's influence was strongly reduced, only electing three MPs.

In the election of 2019 the ANC lost even more seats, but remained the majority party with a seat total of 230 seats. The Official Opposition DA declined from 89 seats to 84 seats. The EFF increased its seat total to 44 seats. The IFP managed to arrest the decline in its support and obtained 14 seats. The Freedom Front Plus (FF+) grew to 10 seats, a gain of 6 seats. Nine other parties obtained seats.

In the election of 2024 the ANC lost its majority for the first time since the end of apartheid, winning just 159 seats out of 400. This was in large part due to the formation of the breakaway MK Party founded by Jacob Zuma, which received 58 seats. The DA fought the election with a provisional coalition known as the Multi-Party Charter. After an extensive negotiation process between parties supporting a "statement of intent", a grand coalition, referred to as the Government of National Unity (GNU), was formed by eleven parties, [9] which together holds a supermajority with 288 seats. [10] On 30 June 2024 the president announced the finalisation of the GNU, with the nine parties having been allocated minsters or deputy ministers in the cabinet. [9]

The following table shows the party composition of the National Assembly over time:

EventDate ANC DP / DA NP / NNP COPE EFF IFP MK NFP VF / VF+ UDM ACDP ID Others
1994 election 27 April 199425278243925
1999 election 2 June 1999266382834314611
2003 floor-crossing 4 April 2003275462031347113
2004 election 14 April 20042795072849779
2005 floor-crossing 15 September 20052934723464518
2007 floor-crossing 15 September 20072974723464415
2009 election 22 April 200926467301844346
2014 election 7 May 2014249893251064437
2019 election 8 May 201923084244142102410
2024 election 29 May 20241598739175863328

Election results

The last finalised election was held on 29 May 2024.

2024 South African National Assembly.svg
PartyNational ballotRegional ballotTotal
seats
+/–
Votes%SeatsVotes%Seats
African National Congress 6,459,68340.18736,231,51939.4086159–71
Democratic Alliance 3,505,73521.81423,439,27221.754587+3
uMkhonto weSizwe 2,344,30914.58312,237,87714.152758New
Economic Freedom Fighters 1,529,9619.52171,556,9659.852239–5
Inkatha Freedom Party 618,2073.858688,5704.35917+3
Patriotic Alliance 330,4252.065345,8802.1949+9
Freedom Front Plus 218,8501.364234,4771.4826–4
ActionSA 192,3731.204219,4771.3926New
African Christian Democratic Party 96,5750.60393,5810.5903–1
United Democratic Movement 78,4480.49285,6180.5413+1
Rise Mzansi 67,9750.42170,1420.4412New
Build One South Africa 65,9120.41269,0200.4402New
African Transformation Movement 63,5540.40266,8310.42020
Al Jama-ah 39,0670.24253,3370.3402+1
National Coloured Congress 37,4220.23147,1780.3012New
Pan Africanist Congress of Azania 36,7160.23140,7880.26010
United Africans Transformation 35,6790.22132,1850.2001New
Good 29,5010.18136,1030.2301–1
Hope4SA 27,2060.17016,8720.1100New
Allied Movement for Change 22,0550.14018,3930.1200New
United Independent Movement 20,0030.12018,9070.1200New
African Independent Congress 19,9000.1203,8330.02000
National Freedom Party 19,3970.12022,7260.1400–2
Azanian People's Organisation 19,0480.12018,7410.1200–2
African Congress for Transformation 18,3540.1103480.0000New
African Heart Congress 16,3060.1003,5790.0200New
Congress of the People 14,1770.09016,7680.1100–2
African People's Convention 13,1950.08014,6930.09000
Africa Restoration Alliance 11,1080.07012,6510.0800New
Forum for Service Delivery 11,0770.0707,4440.05000
Democratic Liberal Congress 10,9040.0707,0220.04000
Alliance of Citizens for Change 9,3360.06011,2170.0700New
Action Alliance Development Party  [ af ]7,8020.0504,6000.0300New
Conservatives in Action  [ af ]7,4240.0501,1150.0100New
South African Royal Kingdoms Organisation  [ af ]6,6850.0403,1950.0200New
Northern Cape Communities Movement  [ af ]6,6290.0407,0160.0400New
People's Movement for Change 5,5390.0307,0450.0400New
Abantu Batho Congress 5,5310.0303,5520.0200New
Economic Liberators Forum  [ af ]5,4080.0307,1150.0400New
Organic Humanity Movement 5,2410.0306,4570.0400New
African Content Movement 5,1070.0304,6170.03000
Sizwe Ummah Nation 5,0160.0304,8690.0300New
South African Rainbow Alliance 4,7960.0307,6450.0500New
African People's Movement 4,6010.0304,2000.0300New
Able Leadership  [ af ]3,8670.0203,1610.0200New
Referendum Party 3,8340.0204,2060.0300New
All Citizens Party  [ af ]3,6930.0201,6440.0100New
Africa Africans Reclaim  [ af ]3,3710.0202,5650.0200New
Citizans  [ af ]2,9920.0204,0840.0300New
Xiluva 2,5920.0201,1670.0100New
African Movement Congress  [ af ]2,1410.0101,5500.0100New
Free Democrats 1,9920.0102,2760.01000
Zackie Achmat (Independent)10,5680.0700New
Total16,076,719100.0020015,814,661100.002004000
Valid votes16,076,71998.6915,814,66199.02
Invalid/blank votes213,4371.31156,8340.98
Total votes16,290,156100.0015,971,495100.00
Registered voters/turnout27,782,08158.6427,782,08157.49
Source: Electoral Commission of South Africa, IOL

Current composition of Parliament compared to % of vote

Election Results
PartySeats % % of votes [11]
ANC 15939.75%39.80%
DA 8721.75%21.78%
MK 5814.50%14.37%
EFF 399.75%9.68%
IFP 174.25%4.10%
PA 92.25%2.12%
VF+ 61.50%1.42%
ActionSA 61.50%1.29%
ACDP 30.75%0.60%
UDM 30.75%0.51%
RISE 20.50%0.43%
BOSA 20.50%0.42%
ATM 20.50%0.41%
Al Jama-ah 20.50%0.29%
NCC 20.50%0.27%
PAC 10.25%0.24%
UAT 10.25%0.21%
Good 10.25%0.21%
Hope4SA [12] 00.00%0.14%
Total400100.00%100.00%

Salaries of members of the National Assembly

Annual monetary remuneration

As of 2024, the highest earning members of the National Assembly are the Speaker of the National Assembly and the deputy president of the Republic of South Africa, who is the head of the executive government's representatives in the National Assembly. They each earn an annual salary of R3,164,654. [13] [14] [15]

The second highest earning members of the National Assembly are Members of Parliament (MP) who are also cabinet ministers. They earn an annual salary of R2,689,937.

The Deputy Speaker and deputy ministers earn an annual salary of R2,215,220. [15]

Senior MPs, such as the leader of the opposition and chief whips of the majority party, earn an annual salary of R1,792,595. [15]

MPs who chair committees earn an annual salary of R1,675,314. [15]

Leaders of minority parties earn R1,507,841. [15]

Regular MPs earn R1,274,536. [15]

Other benefits

According to Business Insider South Africa, SA MPs are in the top 1% earning bracket in the nation. [16] The lowest earning MP earns a monthly salary of around R92,245. [14] [13] This salary comes while the average South African earned a monthly salary of around R21,432, as of September 2019 [17] and the minimum wage was just R20 per hour. [18]

See also

Notes

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    9. 1 2 "Statement by President Cyril Ramaphosa on the appointment of members of the national executive". 30 June 2024. Retrieved 7 July 2024.
    10. "Seat calculation - National Assembly and Provincial Legislatures" (PDF). Independent Electoral Commission. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 June 2024. Retrieved 24 May 2024.
    11. This column shows the average between the national and the regional vote. The numbers of votes in these categories are shown in the above table.
    12. Although Hope4SA has not been allocated any seats in parliament, it is included to show the numbers of the party with the highest vote who was not allocated a seat in parliament.
    13. 1 2 Grant, Africa Check, Researched by Laura (29 May 2019). "How much do South African MPs earn?". The Citizen. Retrieved 4 October 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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    15. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Ramaphosa approves salary hikes for ministers, MPs and premiers". Business Tech. 6 June 2024. Retrieved 14 June 2024.
    16. "Cellphones, R1-million salaries, free flights and airport parking – these are some of the perks awaiting new MPs". BusinessInsider. Retrieved 4 October 2020.
    17. Staff Writer. "This is the average salary in South Africa right now" . Retrieved 4 October 2020.
    18. "Employment and Labour on new National Minimum Wage rate | South African Government". gov.za. Retrieved 4 October 2020.