SONA 2022: Unleashing People’s Power will fix a Broken Nation
“It must be said however, that our review highlighted yet again the urgent need to build an equal, inclusive and just society, if there is to be lasting peace and stability.” Report of the Expert Panel into the July 2021 Unrest.
When President Ramaphosa presents his 2022 State of the Nation Address (SONA) on Thursday it is unlikely to be an upbeat one. Ramaphosa will probably summon all of his gravitas to present a fairly honest assessment of the many challenges our country faces - after all they are hard to deny. We will hear about:
State capture.
State incapability.
Recovery from the Covid crisis.
You can almost script it in advance. We know the formula by now.
But even though SONA will touch honestly on many real issues, it will still be a subjective assessment that is unlikely to admit the whole story. We must view it as the opinion of a President whose job is on the line, on behalf of a political party whose future as a government should be on the line.
However, if we can't expect a wholly honest SONA, what yardsticks should South Africans use to objectively assess the state of our nation?
The answer is straightforward enough.
The Constitution is our supreme law, and lies at the heart of all governance. It then should be the first measure for assessment of progress towards (or away from) the socially just and more equal society it mandates government to create; the human rights that it promises in Chapter 2; and the duty it imposes as a “principle of co-operative government and intergovernmental relations” (section 41) on “all spheres of government and all organs of state within each sphere” to “secure the well-being of the people of the Republic”
Looked at this way, based on objective and independent measures, our nation is in a bad state. South Africa:
Read more of Maverick Citizen editor, Mark Heywood's editorial.
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