The proof is in the pudding Mr President, and the time for action is now

President Cyril Ramaphosa delivered his State of the Nation address on Thursday evening. Picture: South African Government/Facebook

President Cyril Ramaphosa delivered his State of the Nation address on Thursday evening. Picture: South African Government/Facebook

Published Feb 12, 2022

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Editorial

Johannesburg - President Cyril Ramaphosa’s sixth state of the nation address has the opposition DA in raptures, the EFF questioning his dress style, especially his “cheap” suit, and other parties wondering if he just sold the country the same old retreaded promises.

Some analysts are concerned that Ramaphosa is creating a shadow administration within the presidency because his cabinet is either too fractured – or too incompetent – to see his reforms through. There’s a bit of truth in every one of them.

We have heard a lot of the same before, but it is important for the president of the country to acknowledge his own administration and his own party’s role in the current state of our nation. In fact, it’s beyond important, it’s almost unprecedented.

But, at the same time, it’s just as vital to note that Ramaphosa has spent the last two years making an art form of addressing the nation – especially on platforms where there aren’t any questions afterwards – and coming across as reassuring and reasonable.

There will be much chewing over the entrails of his speech. It was slightly longer than previous ones, with some clever headline grabbing initiatives like the hemp industry, but the proof of the pudding, as always, will be in the tasting.

The president is fast running out of runway to start delivering. Jobs have to be created; services have to be delivered; arrests have to be made for last year’s abortive insurrection, to say nothing of acting Chief Justice Raymond Zondo’s State Capture findings; spectrum has to be released; the railways have to be fixed… and so the list goes on.

It’s a herculean task by any standard, but especially in our country where unemployment is as high as it is and the factionalism in the ruling party increasingly spills over into public life.

Let’s hope these aren’t just empty words.

The Saturday Star