Zoliswa Kota-Mpeko | |
---|---|
Member of the National Assembly | |
In office 16 November 2021 –28 May 2024 | |
In office 9 May 1994 –7 May 2019 | |
Deputy Minister of Human Settlements | |
In office 11 May 2009 –7 May 2019 | |
President | Jacob Zuma Cyril Ramaphosa |
Minister | Tokyo Sexwale Connie September Lindiwe Sisulu Nomaindia Mfeketo |
Succeeded by | Ministry reconfigured |
Personal details | |
Born | Cape Town,Cape Province Union of South Africa | 4 April 1956
Alma mater | University of the Western Cape |
Nicknames |
|
Zoliswa Albertina Kota-Mpeko (formerly Kota-Fredericks and Kota-Hendricks; born 4 April 1956) is a South African politician from the Western Cape. A member of the African National Congress (ANC), she served as Deputy Minister of Human Settlements between May 2009 and May 2019. She served six terms in the National Assembly of South Africa.
Born and raised in Cape Town, Kota-Mpeko became politically active as a student activist in the anti-apartheid movement. She rose to prominence as the provincial publicity secretary of the United Democratic Front. After living in exile with the ANC between 1985 and 1991, she returned to represent the party at the Convention for a Democratic South Africa. In the first post-apartheid elections in May 1994, she ran her first provincial election campaign for the ANC and was elected to a seat in the National Assembly.
She served continuously in the National Assembly between May 1994 and May 2019, first leaving the backbenches to serve as chairperson of the Portfolio Committee on Housing from 2002 to 2009. After the April 2009 general election, President Jacob Zuma appointed her as Deputy Minister of Human Settlements, and over the next decade she held that position under four consecutive ministers.
She lost her parliamentary seat in the May 2019 general election and thereafter spent two years as the chairperson of a tech company linked to Iqbal Survé. Between November 2021 and May 2024, she returned to the National Assembly as a backbencher, filling a casual vacancy in the ANC caucus, but she was not nominated for re-election in the 2024 general election. A former provincial chairperson of the Western Cape branch of the ANC Women's League, she was a member of the ANC Provincial Executive Committee between 1992 and 2023, when she failed to gain re-election.
Born on 4 April 1956, [1] Kota-Mpeko was born and raised in Cape Town. [2] She attended Langa High School in the township of Langa, where she became involved in anti-apartheid politics as a teenager. [3] She was involved in student solidarity marches during Mozambican independence in 1974, and she was a member of the coordinating committee of the August 1976 student protests organised in solidarity with the Soweto uprising. [4] [3]
After she matriculated, she was active in political and community organisations in Cape Town, including the Young Christian Workers, the Azanian Students' Organisation, the Congress of South African Students, the Cape Youth Congress, and the Ikhwezi Community Centre in Gugulethu. [5] In 1983, she was a founding member and inaugural secretary of the United Women's Organisation, and she became the publicity secretary of the Western Cape branch of the United Democratic Front (UDF) after the UDF was founded later that year. [5] She also studied social work at the University of the Western Cape, although she did not complete her degree. [6]
After she was detained by the apartheid state under Section 29 of the Internal Security Act, Kota-Mpeko left South Africa in 1985 to go into exile. [3] Beginning her exile in Lesotho and then in Zambia, [5] she joined the African National Congress (ANC) and its military wing, Umkhonto we Sizwe. [6] She received military training in Angola and the Soviet Union. [3] Thereafter, from 1987 to 1991, [5] she represented the ANC at its mission in Isla de la Juventud, Cuba. [3] [6]
Kota-Mpeko returned to South Africa during the negotiations to end apartheid. She was a member of the ANC delegation to the Convention for a Democratic South Africa (CODESA) and also served on the CODESA Gender Advisory Committee. [5] She also resumed her role as UDF provincial publicity secretary, but the UDF was gradually being subsumed into the ANC; she was elected to the ANC's Provincial Executive Committee in the Western Cape in 1992. [5] More importantly, in 1993, she was appointed as the Western Cape ANC's elections coordinator, in which capacity she led its provincial campaign ahead of the first democratic elections in April 1994. [5] [2]
In the April 1994 election, Kota-Mpeko was elected to represent the ANC in the National Assembly, the lower house of the new South African Parliament. [3] During her first three terms in the National Assembly – she was re-elected to her seat in June 1999 and April 2004 – she was an ordinary Member of Parliament, serving on the Portfolio Committee on Sport and Recreation, the Joint Standing Committee on Defence, and the Portfolio Committee on Defence. [3] [5] She ultimately became a committee whip in the Portfolio Committee on Defence, and in 2002, in a midterm caucus reshuffle, she was promoted to become chairperson of the Portfolio Committee on Housing. [6] She was retained in the housing chairmanship after the 2004 election. [7]
At the same time, in 2003, Kota-Mpeko was elected to serve a term as provincial chairperson of the ANC Women's League in the Western Cape, and in that capacity she represented the league in the Progressive Women's Movement after it was launched in 2006; she was a member of the movement's provincial steering committee. [3] [5] She also remained a member of the Provincial Executive Committee of the mainstream ANC. [8]
Ahead of the ANC's 52nd National Conference in 2007, she was nominated to stand for election to the party's National Executive Committee. [9] However, she was not elected. Indeed, according to the Mail & Guardian , she supported Thabo Mbeki's unsuccessful campaign to be re-elected to a third term as ANC president at the conference, making her political position highly precarious. [10]
Kota-Mpeko was nonetheless re-elected to her parliamentary seat in the April 2009 general election, now as a member of the National Assembly's Western Cape caucus. Announcing his first-term cabinet on 10 May 2009, newly elected President Jacob Zuma appointed her as Deputy Minister of Human Settlements, in which capacity she deputised Minister Tokyo Sexwale. [11]
Less than six months into her new job, Kota-Mpeko was hospitalised after a car accident on the N1 near Leeu-Gamka, Western Cape; two people were killed in the accident. [12] [13] She remained hospitalised for over a month, and Minister Sexwale lent her his personal Challenger 300 for her transfer from a George hospital to one in Cape Town. [14] [15]
In 2011 Kota-Mpeko briefly served as interim provincial leader of the Western Cape ANC, after Mcebisi Skwatsha's elected leadership corps was disbanded. [16] The following year, she again stood unsuccessfully for election to the ANC National Executive Committee, this time at the party's 53rd National Conference. [17] She was retained as Deputy Minister after Zuma reshuffled the executive in mid-2013, replacing Sexwale with new Minister Connie September. [18] In addition, the ANC appointed her to lead its Western Cape election campaign ahead of the 2014 general election; she said that her strategy was to focus on attracting young voters, especially in the poor townships of Khayelitsha and Delft. [2]
When the Western Cape ANC nominated its candidates for the election, she was the most popular candidate for the ANC provincial party list. [19] Ranked first on that list, she was comfortably re-elected to the National Assembly when the election was held in May 2014. [20] Announcing his second-term cabinet on 25 May, Zuma reappointed her as Deputy Minister of Human Settlements, now serving under Minister Lindiwe Sisulu. [21] At the ANC's next provincial elective conference in June 2015, she was touted as a possible candidate for the position of Deputy Provincial Chairperson, [22] [23] but Khaya Magaxa was elected to that office and Kota-Mpeko merely gained re-election as an ordinary member of the Provincial Executive Committee. [24]
She served as Deputy Minister of Human Settlements throughout the Fifth Parliament, remaining in the ministry after President Cyril Ramaphosa replaced Zuma in a February 2018 midterm presidential election. Ramaphosa appointed Nomaindia Mfeketo to succeed Sisulu as Minister. [25]
In the May 2019 general election, Kota-Mpeko was ranked 133rd on the ANC's national party list, [20] and she lost her seat in the National Assembly. [26] [27] Over the next two years, she took a hiatus from frontline politics. She remained active in the Western Cape ANC: in August 2019, Marius Fransman's leadership corps was dissolved, and Kota-Mpeko was appointed to the 30-member interim committee, headed by Lerumo Kalako, that led the provincial party thereafter. [28]
At the same time, amaBhungane reported that Kota-Mpeko became an important figure in Iqbal Survé's business empire: having served on the board of Survé's Sekunjalo Investments before her appointment as a deputy minister, [29] she had been appointed as a director of six different Survé-linked companies on 1 March 2019 in the run-up to the election. [30] One of them was 4Plus, a tech company of which she became board chairperson; she led an investment company called Womens Technology Investments which had a controlling stake in 4Plus. [30] [31] In 2020 and 2021, amaBhungane claimed that 4Plus was being used to distribute Public Investment Corporation funding to Survé's business interests. [30] [31]
On 16 November 2021, Kota-Mpeko was sworn in to an ANC seat in the National Assembly, filling the casual vacancy created by Hlengiwe Mkhize's death. [32] She served as an ordinary member of the Standing Committee on the Auditor-General from February 2022 until the end of the Sixth Parliament. [20] During this period, in June 2023, the Western Cape ANC held its first provincial elective conference since 2015. Kota-Mpeko was not elected to return to the Provincial Executive Committee elected by the conference. [33] She also was not nominated to stand for re-election to the National Assembly in the next general election in May 2024. [20]
Grace Naledi Mandisa Pandor is a South African politician, educator and academic who served as the Minister of International Relations and Cooperation until 2024. She also served as a Member of Parliament (MP) for the African National Congress (ANC) since 1994.
The 52nd National Conference of the African National Congress (ANC) was held in Polokwane, Limpopo, from 16 to 20 December 2007. At the conference, Jacob Zuma and his supporters were elected to the party's top leadership and National Executive Committee (NEC), dealing a significant defeat to national President Thabo Mbeki, who had sought a third term in the ANC presidency. The conference was a precursor to the general election of 2009, which the ANC was extremely likely to win and which did indeed lead to Zuma's ascension to the presidency of South Africa. Mbeki was prohibited from serving a third term as national President but, if re-elected ANC President, could likely have leveraged that office to select his successor.
Lynne Brown is a South African politician who is a former Minister of Public Enterprises and former Premier of the Western Cape Province. She was born in Cape Town and grew up in Mitchells Plain. She was appointed Premier of the Western Cape following the resignation of Ebrahim Rasool in July 2008. Previously, she was Minister for Economic Development and Tourism. She is a member of the African National Congress (ANC) and an elected member of its National Executive Committee in 2007 and 2012. She is from a coloured background and was the fourth coloured premier of the Western Cape, the second from the ANC, and the first openly gay person to be appointed to a cabinet post in any African government.
Nomvula Paula Mokonyane is a South African politician who is currently the First Deputy Secretary-General of the African National Congress (ANC). She was the first female Premier of Gauteng from 2009 to 2014 and subsequently served in the national government as Minister of Water and Sanitation from 2014 to 2018, Minister of Communications in 2018, and Minister of Environmental Affairs from 2018 to 2019.
Tina Monica Joemat-Pettersson was a South African politician who served as the Chairperson of the Portfolio Committee on Police from July 2019 until her death in June 2023. A member of the African National Congress, Joemat-Petterson had previously served as the Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries from 2009 until 2014 and as the Minister of Energy from May 2014 until March 2017 under President Jacob Zuma.
Mathole Serofo Motshekga is a South African lawyer and politician who was elected to his third consecutive term as a Member of Parliament in the 2019 general election. He formerly represented his political party, the African National Congress (ANC), as the second Premier of Gauteng.
Cassel Mathale is a South African politician who was the third Premier of Limpopo between March 2009 and July 2013. He is currently the Deputy Minister of Police in the South African government and before that was Deputy Minister of Small Business Development from February 2018 to May 2019.
The 53rd National Conference of the African National Congress (ANC) was held in Mangaung, Free State from 16 to 20 December 2012, during the centenary of the ANC's establishment, also in Mangaung. It re-elected incumbent President Jacob Zuma and his supporters to the party's top leadership and National Executive Committee (NEC), solidly defeating an opposing group that had coalesced around presidential challenger Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe.
Edward Senzo Mchunu is a South African politician currently serving as Minister of Police since 30 June 2024. A member of the African National Congress (ANC), he was formerly the Minister of Public Service and Administration from 30 May 2019 to 5 August 2021 and the Premier of KwaZulu-Natal from 22 August 2013 until 23 May 2016.
Thandi Ruth Modise is a South African politician who served as the Minister of Defence and Military Veterans from 2021 to 2024. She was previously the Premier of the North West from 2010 to 2014, Chairperson of the National Council of Provinces from 2014 to 2019, and Speaker of the National Assembly from 2019 to 2021.
Marius Llewellyn Fransman is a South African politician and teacher. He served as Leader of the Opposition in the Western Cape Provincial Parliament from 2014 to 2016, and as Chairperson of the Western Cape African National Congress from 2011 to 2016. He served as Deputy Minister of International Relations and Cooperation in the cabinet of Jacob Zuma. From 2009 to 2014, he was a Member of the National Assembly. Fransman served as a Member of the Western Cape Provincial Parliament from 1999 to 2009, and again from 2014 to 2016.
Andries Carl Nel is a South African politician who is currently serving as the Deputy Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development. He is a member of the African National Congress (ANC) and was a human rights lawyer during apartheid.
Gaolatlhe Godfrey Oliphant is a South African politician and former trade unionist from the Northern Cape. He was the Deputy Minister of Mineral Resources between November 2010 and May 2019. A member of the African National Congress, he served in the National Assembly of South Africa from May 1994 to May 2019, excepting a three-month hiatus in 2009.
Mcebisi Skwatsha is a politician from the Western Cape. He is currently serving as the Deputy Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development since May 2019. Before that portfolio was established, he was Deputy Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform from 2014 to 2019.
Elizabeth Thabethe was a South African politician and former trade unionist from Gauteng. She represented the African National Congress (ANC) in the National Assembly of South Africa for five terms from May 1994 to May 2019. Between 2005 and 2019, she served as a deputy minister in the national governments of four successive presidents. After leaving the National Assembly, she was special investment envoy to President Cyril Ramaphosa until her death in March 2021.
Pamela Tshwete is a South African politician from the Eastern Cape. She is currently serving as Deputy Minister of Human Settlements since August 2021. She has been a member of the National Assembly since 2002 and a deputy minister since 2013.
Mabel Patronella Mentor, known as Vytjie Mentor, was a South African politician, who served as a member of the National Assembly from 2002 until 2014. She represented the African National Congress and served as the party's caucus chairperson between 2004 and 2008. She was chairperson of the portfolio committee on public enterprises from 2009 to 2010. She is credited to be one of the first people to break ranks with the ANC and raise the alarm on state capture.
Mary-Ann Lindelwa Dunjwa is a South African politician from the Eastern Cape. A member of the African National Congress, she was elected to the National Assembly in 2009. After her re-election in 2014, she became the Chairperson of the Portfolio Committee on Health, a position she held until 2019, when she was elected Chairperson of the Portfolio Committee on Employment and Labour.
Tandi Mahambehlala is a South African politician who has served as the Chairperson of the Portfolio Committee on Tourism since 2021. A member of the African National Congress (ANC), she served as the Chairperson of the Portfolio Committee on International Relations and Cooperation from 2019 to 2021. Mahambehlala was Deputy Minister of Communications between 2017 and 2018. She has been a Member of Parliament since 2014.
Lincoln Vumile "James" Ngculu is a South African businessman, politician, and former anti-apartheid activist. He represented the African National Congress (ANC) in the National Assembly from 1998 to 2009 and was provincial chairperson of the ANC's Western Cape branch from 2005 to 2008.