Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 101South Africa
African Transformation Movement v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others (7186/2022; 21574/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 101; [2023] 3 All SA 58 (WCC) (26 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
26 April 2023
Headnotes
the Speaker had laboured under a misconception that a party requesting a secret ballot bore an onus. It reversed the judgment at first instance and set aside the Speaker’s decision; see African Transformation Movement v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others [2021] ZASCA 164 (2 December 2021); [2022] 1 All SA 615 (SCA); 2022 (4) SA 409 (SCA), to which we shall hereinafter refer, where convenient as “the ATM
Judgment
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## African Transformation Movement v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others (7186/2022; 21574/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 101; [2023] 3 All SA 58 (WCC) (26 April 2023)
African Transformation Movement v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others (7186/2022; 21574/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 101; [2023] 3 All SA 58 (WCC) (26 April 2023)
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sino date 26 April 2023
[REPORTABLE]
Republic of South
Africa
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
Case No.s: 7186/2022 &
21574/2022
Coram: Le Grange,
Binns-Ward et Thulare JJ
Hearing: 13-14
February 2023
Judgment: 26 April 2023
In the matters between:
AFRICAN
TRANSFORMATION MOVEMENT
Applicant
And
THE
SPEAKER OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY
First
Respondent
THE
PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
Second Respondent
AFRICAN
NATIONALCONGRESS
Third
Respondent
DEMOCRATIC
ALLIANCE
Fourth
Respondent
ECONOMIC
FREEDOM FIGHTERS
Fifth
Respondent
INKHATA
FREEDOM PARTY
Sixth
Respondent
FREEDOM
FRONT PLUS
Seventh
Respondent
UNITED
DEMOCRATIC MOVEMENT
Eighth
Respondent
AFRICAN
INDEPENDENT CONGRESS
Ninth
Respondent
CONGRESS
OF THE PEOPLE
Tenth
Respondent
GOOD
PARTY
Eleventh Respondent
AFRICAN
CHRISTIAN DEMOCRATIC PARTY
Twelfth
Respondent
PAN
CHRISTIAN DEMOCRATIC PARTY
Thirteenth Respondent
AL-
JAM-AH
Fourteenth
Respondent
JUDGMENT: 26 APRIL
2023
THE
COURT
:
[1]
The two applications before the Court
concern very similar questions. The commonality of the parties and
issues made it convenient
to hear them together.
[2]
The first application (in case
no. 7186/2022) concerns a motion of no confidence in the
President first tabled by the African
Transformation Movement (‘ATM’)
in the National Assembly on 11 February 2020. It was
scheduled to
be debated and voted on only on 3 December 2020.
Shortly before the scheduled debate, and after the Speaker had
declined
its request for a secret ballot, the ATM applied urgently to
court for an order setting aside the Speaker’s decision and for
certain consequential relief. The application could be heard
only in February 2021 and the ATM requested the Speaker to remove
the
motion from the order paper until its application to court had been
adjudicated. The application was dismissed in March
2021 but
leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal (“SCA”)
was granted.
[3]
The issue that crystalised for
determination in the SCA was whether the Speaker had been correct in
approaching the ATM’s
request for a secret ballot on the basis
that the ATM bore an onus to establish that a secret ballot would be
appropriate.
In a judgment delivered on 2 December 2021,
the SCA held that the Speaker had laboured under a misconception that
a party
requesting a secret ballot bore an onus. It reversed
the judgment at first instance and set aside the Speaker’s
decision;
see
African Transformation
Movement v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others
[2021]
ZASCA 164
(2 December 2021);
[2022] 1 All SA 615
(SCA);
2022 (4)
SA 409
(SCA), to which we shall hereinafter refer, where convenient
as “the
ATM
judgment” or “the
ATM
case”
.
[4]
The SCA substituted the order made in the
High Court with an order whose substantive terms provided as follows:
“
1
The decision by the first respondent [the Speaker] to decline the
applicant’s request
for the motion of no confidence in the
President to be conducted by secret ballot is reviewed and set aside.
2
The applicant’s request for such motion to be conducted by
secret ballot is remitted
to the first respondent for a fresh
decision.”
[5]
The ATM then reinstated its motion of no
confidence, which was rescheduled to be debated and voted upon on 30
March 2022.
The Speaker duly reconsidered the ATM’s
renewed request for the vote to be conducted by secret ballot but
again decided to
decline it.
[6]
The Speaker set out the reasons for her
decision in a letter to the ATM dated 16 February 2022, which in
material part went
as follows:
I
believe that the question in hand is still what public good would be
served or undermined, in employing either secret ballot or
open
mechanism for the Assembly in deciding on your motion. To this end, I
have had regard to the guidelines as previously set
out in the
Constitutional Court judgment in the case of
UDM
v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others
(2017),
[
[1]
]
to
guide me in exercising the discretionary power with strict adherence
to the Court’s guidance…… In assessing
the
prevailing atmosphere, I took into account the fact that the country
successfully voted in free and fair local government elections
a mere
month before the re-submission of your party’s request for a
vote of no confidence in the President. In the same vein,
we have
listened to the President deliver his State of the Nation address to
the country on 10 February 2022, in an atmosphere
that allowed all
political parties to freely debate matters of national importance
over the last two days. Robust debate does not
point to a toxic
environment, but actually confirms that members are free to express
themselves without fear or favour. Your party’s
request is
coming at a time when the President has received and immediately
shared with the public the first two reports of the
State Capture
Commission allowing for processes to unfold to deal with the findings
and recommendations set forth therein.
In further considering
the political environment, I specifically reflected on the suspension
of Mr. Dirks, MP, and have come to
the conclusion that Mr. Dirks will
have the full benefit of the law in defending his rights. The other
factor that I had regard
to, is the contestation amongst candidates
leading up to the electoral conference of the governing party in
December. I find nothing
that suggests that violence or any other
threat prevails at this time in respect of any of these
circumstances, beyond what are
normal tensions in a democracy. These
factors do not lead me to conclude that openness and transparency
should not prevail, as
they are in my view events that do not point
to a toxified and highly charged atmosphere, but rather events that
can only take
place if all systems are generally functioning within
our constitutional democracy.
In
this prevailing environment
I have
had to decide whether a secret ballot procedure is appropriate in
light of other constitutional imperatives, including the
foundational
Constitutional principle of “openness”, as set out in
section 1(d) of the Constitution, 1996, as a guide
to our democratic
order. I am equally cognisant of the Constitutional requirement as
set out in section 59(1)(b) that the National
Assembly must conduct
its proceedings in an open manner. This is the manner in which we
conduct our business and the NA Rules are
crafted to give effect to
these principles unless required otherwise by the constitution, and
now indeed the courts.
Thus the
Constitutional imperatives set out above, balanced with my objective
consideration of the prevailing political circumstances
in the
country right now, suggest that it is more compelling for the
Assembly to exercise this important and consequential decision
as
contained in your motion, in a manner that will engender public trust
and confidence in the Assembly and in our elected officials.
I reiterate, that no
political environment will be entirely free of political tensions,
either between or within parties. This has
been the most important
consideration. I am aware that political contestation exists within
the governing party, of which the President
is the national leader.
It is not unusual for such tensions to exist I political parties.
However, the court has emphasised that
whether an open or secret
voting mechanism is used, remains at the discretion of the Speaker.
It stressed that the circumstances
will dictate the decision, which
suggests that both mechanisms are permissible. To give effect to this
responsibility, I have had
regard to all the objective or discernible
information and considered that the prevailing atmosphere is not so
toxified or so highly
charged that members of the Assembly would be
prevented from exercising their vote on such a motion in accordance
with their conscience
in an open voting procedure.”
[7]
In response to a further request by the ATM
based on additional representations, the Speaker confirmed her
earlier decision in a
letter dated 9 March 2022, in which she stated
-
“
In
this letter I will not repeat the contents of my letter dated 16
February 2022, except to state that openness remains the default
position and guiding principle that informs how the National Assembly
must conduct its proceedings and that since my last letter
to you
there has been no change in this substantive legal and Constitutional
framework to compel a deviation from this position…..
…
[T]he
numerous reasons that I put forward in support of an open voting
procedure in my previous letter dated 16 February 2022 still
stand,
and do not need to be repeated here. Accordingly, I am not persuaded
that circumstances have changed to warrant the use
of a secret ballot
voting procedure when the motion is considered by the Assembly”
[8]
The scheduling of the motion for debate on
30 March 2022 occurred on 10 March.
[9]
On 14 March 2022, the ATM instituted the
first application which, in terms of the notice of motion, was set
down for hearing on
28 March 2022. It sought the following
relief as a matter of urgency:
“
orders
–
1.
Directing that this matter be dealt with as
an urgent application and that the applicant's non-compliance with
the ordinary rules
for service and time periods set out in the
Uniform Rules be condoned as contemplated by Uniform Rule 6(12).
2.
Declaring the decision taken by the first
respondent on 16 February 2022 and 9 March 2022 rejecting the
applicant's request for
[?a] closed/secret ballot in respect of the
motion of no confidence in the second respondent in terms of section
102 of the Constitution
of the Republic of South Africa 1996, as
inconsistent with the Constitution and invalid.
3.
Reviewing and setting aside the decision
taken by the first respondent on 16 February 2022 and 9 March 2022.
4.
Substituting the decision of the first
respondent taken on 16 February 2022 and 9 March 2022 [?with] the
following
The African
Transformation Movement’s motion of no confidence, in terms of
section 102 of the Constitution of the Republic
of South Africa,
1996, in the President of the Republic of South Africa in the
National Assembly on 30 March 2022 shall be conducted
by a closed
ballot procedure.
5.
Directing that the costs of this
application be paid by the first respondent and all those respondents
who oppose the relief sought
herein.
6.
Further and/or alternative relief.”
[10]
The ATM contended that the Speaker, on
reconsideration, had made the same error that caused the SCA to
initially review and set
aside her decision.
[11]
The second application (in case
no. 21574/2022) concerns the lawfulness of the Speaker’s
decision to decline the ATM’s
request for a secret ballot
procedure in respect of the National Assembly’s consideration
of a report by an independent panel
established in terms of rule 129D
of the National Assembly’s rules regarding a motion initiated
by the ATM for the removal
of the President from office in terms of
s 89 of the Constitution.
[12]
The second application was launched on 20
December 2022, with a self-set timetable in the notice of motion
directed at rendering
it ripe for hearing as an opposed application
on 25 January 2023. The matter was, however, struck from the
roll for lack
of urgency on that date. It was then re-enrolled
by arrangement with the Acting Judge President for hearing on the
semi-urgent
roll together with the first application.
[13]
The factual context of the second
application was the following. On 18 July 2022, the leader of the ATM
initiated proceedings in
the National Assembly for the removal of the
President from office. An independent panel was appointed in
terms of the applicable
rules of the National Assembly to investigate
whether there was sufficient evidence to support the allegations upon
which the proceedings
had been initiated. The panel furnished its
report on 30 November 2022. The panel concluded that there was
prima facie evidence
to substantiate the complaint concerning the
President’s alleged misconduct. The rules of the National
Assembly required
the report of the independent panel to be tabled
for consideration by the Assembly. Only if the report were
accepted by the
Assembly would a parliamentary impeachment committee
then be constituted to investigate the President’s alleged
misconduct.
[14]
On 1 December 2022 the leader of the ATM,
Mr Zungula, requested the Speaker to determine that the Assembly’s
resolution whether
to accept the report should be voted on by a
secret or closed ballot procedure. In support of the request,
the leader of
the ATM stated the following:
“
9.
It cannot be denied that the current political environment is clearly
toxic on a range of levels.
We draw the attention of the Speaker to
death threats in the public domain that Honourable Dirks is living
under which are being
investigated by Crime Intelligence, OB
1260=02-2022.
10.
With the ruling party leading to its national leadership conference,
there are already very serious
tensions within the party with
accusations and counter accusation amongst party members playing out
in the public domain. There
is evidence of killings in branches of
the ruling party and what could amount to bribery of members of
parliament. Madam Speaker
is reminded that President Ramaphosa
confessed in Parliament that he gave money to EFF members prior to
his election as President
of the Republic. Those members were
subsequently removed from Parliament because the EFF rightfully so
did not approve of this
unethical conduct. In response to a further
question as to how many other members of Parliament he gave money to,
President Ramaphosa
made another confession and said that he had
given money to ‘a number of other members as well’. It
remains a mystery
even today particularly with the sealing of CR 17
Bank statements to establish the extent of compromised members of
Parliament
who would not be able to openly vote against President
Ramaphosa.
11.
It therefore follows that opened voting will not be according to each
member's conscience as required
[?by] the oath of office but would be
according to the party loyalty, party line factionalism and
influenced by the money received
from the person who deserves to be
voted out.
12.
In the result, Madam speaker is urged to grant secret ballot to give
effect to the directive of the
Constitution.
”
[15]
In
her letter of reply, dated 4 December 2022, the Speaker acknowledged
that the Constitutional Court jurisprudence in
United
Democratic Movement v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others
[2017]
ZACC 21
(22 June
2017); 2017 (8) BCLR 1061
(CC);
2017 (5) SA 300
(CC), hereinafter referred to simply as “
UDM
”,
[2]
established that it was within the power of the Speaker to determine
in appropriate circumstances that there should be a secret
vote.
The Speaker recorded that she had been guided by the principles and
considerations identified in the judgment and explained
her decision
to decline the request as follows:
“
Guided
by the principles provided by the Constitutional Court, I have had to
balance your reasons for a secret ballot procedure
against other
imperatives, including the foundational constitutional principle of
‘openness’, as set out in Section
1(d) of the
Constitution which guides our democratic order. The constitutional
requirement as set out in Section 59(1)(b), that
the National
Assembly must conduct its proceedings in an open manner, is also an
important consideration in this case as at all
times.
I believe that the
constitutional imperatives sit out above are equally compelling for
the Assembly to uphold, when considered against
my assessment of the
prevailing political atmosphere in the country at present. An open
and transparent procedure followed by the
Assembly to exercise this
important decision on the Section 89 Independent Panel report, can
only bring about public trust and
confidence in the Assembly and our
democratic dispensation.
South African society
is by its nature very politically robust and engaged. A parliamentary
environment is always a highly politicised
space, and can never be
entirely free of political tensions, either between or even within
parties. I am alive to what I consider
to be serious political
contestation within the governing party, to which the President of
the Republic belongs and is the national
leader. However, I do not
believe that the atmosphere is so generally toxified or so highly
charged that members of the Assembly
would be prevented from
exercising their vote on this question in accordance with their
conscience using an open voting procedure.
This is borne out by the
various views that have been freely and publicly expressed over the
last couple of days.
On the contrary, I
believe that it closed voting procedure will deprive the citizens of
identifying the positions of their representatives
across party lines
and it may facilitate the possibility of corruption aimed at
influencing members to vote in a manner where they
will be shielded
from accountability to the people they represent for the exercise of
their constitutional duty.
Accordingly,
I cannot accede to your request for the use of a secret ballot voting
procedure when the assembly votes on the section
89 independent panel
report.
”
[16]
It was determined at a meeting of the
Assembly’s programming committee on 5 December 2022 that
the independent panel’s
report would be considered by the
Assembly at a sitting on 13 December 2022. At that meeting,
which Mr Zungula attended,
the Speaker was recorded as having said
the following:
“
Firstly,
we all agree to the 13th. I don't hear any dissenting voice, and that
from now onwards, your office will start organising
or arranging for
a venue where we will all be physical. That's number two.
The third issue is that
this will be a manual roll call. Is that agreed? Those are three
critical issues which we seem to be agreeing
to.
Honourable Members, it's
not as though the issue of secret ballot as Honourable Zungula
referred to earlier was not raised. It was
raised. However,
Honourable Zungula, the reasons given, right, did not assist us, did
not enable us, to take an informed decision
in a sense.
You know
that once you say secret ballot, it has to be extraordinary
circumstances, and that is the only reason why you were not
granted a
secret ballot
. For now ... there's loadshedding ... my God ...
for now, we are agreeing honourable members, we will proceed in the
manner I've outlined ...”
The
Speaker, immediately after making those utterances also stated that
she had: “
..considered the request
for a vote by secret ballot and have communicated my decision and the
reasons for my decision in this regard
”
.
[17]
The applicant placed emphasis on the
sentence in the Speaker’s utterances, that has been underlined
in the passage quoted
above. It contended that it was at odds
with the Speaker’s written reasons for declining its request
for a secret ballot.
It also argued that the Speaker’s
utterance demonstrated an approach at odds with the import of the
SCA’s judgment
in the
ATM
case.
[18]
On 6 December 2022, the ATM wrote to the
Speaker asking her to reconsider her decision. The letter,
which was written by Mr
Zungula, recorded that the ATM accepted that
the Speaker had acted in good faith in making her initial decision.
It did not
refer to or in any way rely on the aforementioned
utterances of the Speaker at the previous day’s meeting of the
Programming
Committee.
[19]
In support of its request for a
reconsideration of the Speaker’s decision, the ATM drew
attention to a statement published
on Twitter at @ANC that the
national executive committee of the ANC had resolved that the ANC
would vote against the adoption of
the independent panel’s
report “
given the fact that it
[the report]
is
being taken on
[judicial]
review
”.
It also referred to a statement by the acting secretary-general of
the ANC at a related press briefing that although
there were
differing views on the matter within the party it would be
instructing its members to vote in accordance with the determination
made by its national executive committee. The ATM pointed out
that between national conferences the NEC was the highest
decision-making body of the ANC and proceeded as follows, “
noting
the ANC subscribes to Democratic Centralism where the decision of the
higher structure is binding to all members of the organisation,
it is
impossible and irrational to the extreme to expect disciplined
members of the ANC who differ with the position of the organisation
to defy their line of march and vote according to their conscience as
envisaged by the Speaker ... The ANC NEC directive means
the citizens
will only be exposed to the party
position instead of individual
representatives and thus the stated contention of the speaker is
heavily contradicted and defeated
”.
The letter also drew attention to a statement by the ANC chief whip
that ANC members would be expected “
to
toe the party line
”.
[20]
The Speaker responded by letter dated 12
December 2022, in which she confirmed her initial decision and stood
by the reasons that
she had provided for making it.
[21]
The ATM again addressed the Speaker by
letter on 12 December 2022, in which it contended that her refusal to
accede to its entreaties
for a secret ballot was irrational and
unlawful for being at odds with the judgment of the Constitutional
Court in
UDM
supra.
[22]
On 13 December 2022, shortly before the
debate and vote on the independent panel’s report, the Speaker
wrote to Mr Zungula
as follows:
“
Your
letter dated 12 December 2022, bears reference.
I
have noted your arguments about the ANC NEC directive and the
threatened expulsion of members, as I did in my last correspondence
to you. In the final analysis the decision to determine whether the
prevailing circumstances generally are such that members would
be
prevented from acting in line with their conscience when voting
openly, is that of the Speaker. There is no specific evidence
members
of the ANC would not vote in line with their constitutional
obligation, in spite of the factors you have mentioned
.
In
UDM at paragraph 80, the Court said: ‘
Considerations
of transparency and openness sometimes demand a display of courage
and the resoluteness to boldly advance the best
interests of those
they represent no matter the consequences, including the risk of
dismissal for non compliance with the parties
instructions. The
electorate is at times entitled to know are their representatives
carry out even some of their most sensitive
publications, such as
passing a motion of no confidence. They are not supposed to always
operate under the cover of secrecy.
’
I
believe that Members as leaders in their own right must be given the
platform and opportunity to demonstrate their irrevocable
commitment
to do what the Constitution and the laws require of them. As I have
previously indicated, as Speaker I have exercised
my constitutional
responsibility to consider all prevailing factors, and have
determined that an open roll call voting mechanism
would be
appropriate under the circumstances.
”
[23]
Voting took place by open ballot on 13
December 2013. According to the Speaker, 149 Members of the National
Assembly, including
5 Members of the ANC voted to accept the report
of the independent panel, whilst 214 Members voted against accepting
it.
[24]
It bears noting that a Forum comprised of a
number of opposition parties in the National Assembly, including the
ATM, issued a public
statement prior to the Assembly’s
consideration of the independent panel’s report announcing that
their representatives
in the Assembly would be voting in favour of
the acceptance of the panel’s report and the consequent
establishment in terms
of the Assembly’s rules of an
impeachment committee to investigate the President’s alleged
misconduct.
[25]
The ATM sought the following relief in the
second application:
“
orders
–
1.
Directing that this application be heard as
an urgent application and that the applicants non compliance with the
ordinary rules
for service and time periods set out in the Uniform
Rules of Court be condoned as contemplated by Uniform Rule 6(12), and
that
this application be heard together with the application pending
before this Court under case number 7186/2022.
2.
Reviewing and setting aside, and declaring
as unconstitutional and invalid, the decision of the first
respondent, rejecting the
applicant's request for a closed ballot
procedure in respect of the proceedings contemplated by rule 129I of
the section 89 Impeachment
Rules of the National Assembly, at the
Fourth Session of the Sixth Parliament, on 13 December 2022.
3.
Reviewing and setting aside the proceedings
of the National Assembly on 13 December 2022, pursuant to rule 129I
of the impeachment
rules of the National Assembly and declaring it
(
sic
) to
be invalid.
4.
Substituting the decision of the first
respondent by directing that the voting procedure to be followed by
the National Assembly
in conducting the rule 129I impeachment
proceedings, be conducted by a closed ballot procedure.
5.
Directing that the costs of the application
be paid by those respondents who oppose the relief sought herein.
6.
Further and/or alternative relief.”
[26]
The applications were opposed by the
Speaker and the ANC, which was the Third Respondent in both matters.
[27]
The Economic Freedom Fighters (“EFF”),
which was cited as the fifth respondent in both matters, did not
oppose the application;
instead, somewhat unconventionally, it filed
a substantive affidavit in support of the ATM’s application in
case no. 21574/22.
The ANC filed an objection to the EFF’s
affidavit on the grounds that it was an irregular step.
[28]
At the commencement of the hearing,
however, in response to a query from the Court, counsel for the third
respondent indicated that
the objection was not being pursued.
The ANC did, at that stage, nonetheless reserve its position in
respect of costs concerning
the EFF’s participation in support
of the application. It ultimately let that issue also go by the
way. We shall nevertheless
have something to say later in this
judgment about the way the EFF engaged in the case because it raised
procedural questions that
might usefully be clarified for the benefit
of parties in comparable situations in future.
[29]
Assuming that this court is able to
entertain these applications, a matter we shall come to shortly,
there are two main issues for
determination in both applications. The
first is whether the Speaker decisions stand to be vitiated on
account of procedural and/or
substantive irrationality. The second
is, if they were, whether this Court ought to substitute her decision
with an order requiring
a secret ballot for both the motion of no
confidence and the rule 129I impeachment proceedings against the
President.
[30]
It
seemed to us, however, that the first issue might be moot, and if it
was, we would not reach the consequential question.
It was
incumbent on us to raise the question of mootness in view of the
determination by the SCA in
Minister
of Justice and Correctional Services and Others v Estate Late James
Stransham-Ford and Others
[3]
that
the High Court does not have jurisdiction to decide matters that no
longer present an existing or live controversy. In
Stransham-Ford
,
the applicant, who was terminally ill, had sought an order granting a
medical practitioner authority to assist his suicide by
administering
him a lethal agent. The matter was characterised as moot
because the applicant died very shortly before the
court of first
instance was able to deliver judgment.
[31]
In the current case the relief sought by
the ATM bore only on the voting methods of the National Assembly on
the ATM’s motion
of no confidence in the President scheduled
for 30 March 2022 and in respect of the resolution to be taken
pursuant to the Assembly’s
consideration on 13 December 2022 of
the report of independent panel established to conduct a preliminary
enquiry into the merits
of a motion, initiated in terms of s 89
of the Constitution, for the removal of the President. For reasons
that will soon
become apparent, it had no wider import despite there
being a prayer in the second application for the setting aside of the
resolution
adopted by the National Assembly on 13 December 2022.
[32]
In respect of the first application,
mootness was an issue because the ATM’s motion of no confidence
tabled for decision at
a sitting at the end of March 2022 was not
moved by the ATM because the vote would be an open one. A
determination at this
stage, one year later, whether the Speaker’s
decision that the vote should be an open one would in the
circumstances be of
no practical effect. The position seems to
us to be closely comparable to that which obtained in
Mazibuko
v Sisulu and Another
[2013] ZACC 28
(27
August
2013); 2013 (6) SA 249
(CC);
2013 (11) BCLR 1297
(CC), where
the proceedings concerned a claim by the Democratic Alliance for the
enforcement of its demand that the Speaker schedule
a motion of no
confidence for 22 November 2012. When that date passed without the
DA’s claim having been acceded to, the
matter was regarded as
moot; see
Mazibuko
at para 23-24.
[33]
The
Constitutional Court confirmed in
UDM
that decisions whether a vote of no confidence should be by open or
secret ballot fall to be made with regard to the surrounding
circumstances immediately prevailing when the National Assembly is
scheduled to vote on the motion. Consequently, if a court
is
called upon to pronounce on the legality of the decision determining
the method of voting, that must be done urgently.
If it is not
done, the circumstances to be taken into account will have changed.
If the motion is to be revisited months later,
even on the same
facts, a fresh decision would be required irrespective of the merit
or lack thereof of the one taken earlier in
different circumstances.
The prior impugned decision will be redundant. Setting it aside
will be of no practical effect.
[4]
[34]
It is one thing to acknowledge that a court
would be duty bound, if it found in deciding a matter heard by it
that the Speaker acted
unconstitutionally, to make a declaratory
order to that effect. It is a different matter whether a court
should entertain
a challenge in circumstances in which its decision
in respect of the impugned decision would be academic.
[35]
If the ATM were to have their motion
reinstated one year after it was first scheduled to be debated and to
request the Speaker to
determine on a secret vote, she would have to
consider the request in the light of current circumstances, not those
that prevailed
when she made the impugned decision. Even if we
were to consider the declaratory relief sought by the ATM in the
first application,
no purpose would be served by exercising whatever
discretion this Court has in such matters to grant declarators.
The case
does not raise any issue of principle that has not already
been declared by the Constitutional Court in
UDM
and by the SCA in the
ATM
case.
[36]
It seems clear to us, if regard is had to
Rules 102 to 104 of the National Assembly and the Constitutional
Court’s judgment
in
UDM
,
that - except where the Constitution prescribes a secret vote - any
decision by the Speaker that a vote should be by secret ballot
would
have to be “predetermined”; in other words, members would
be informed of the decision ahead of the debate.
Rule 129,
which pertains to motions of no confidence, requires the Speaker to
engage with various organs of the Assembly in respect
of the
scheduling of such motions. It is evident from the cases in
which the matter of whether a vote on a no confidence
motion should
be secret have been litigated that the issue is not one that has ever
been sprung on members as a surprise on the
day of the debate.
It should therefore always be possible for a party or member that is
aggrieved by the Speaker’s
decision to approach the court for
appropriate relief urgently, if so advised, before the motion is put
to a vote. That way
they can pre-empt any question of mootness.
[37]
In respect of the first application, it is
evident that the ATM did endeavour to have its application
entertained as an urgent matter.
It is not clear to us why the
application was not heard on that basis. But the fact that the
ATM did not succeed in obtaining
a timeous hearing does not detract
from the reality that the issue of whether the Speaker should have
determined the vote scheduled
for 30 March 2022 should be by secret
ballot became moot when the motion was not put to the vote then. As
happened in
Mazibuko
supra, the world has since moved on.
[38]
In respect of the second application, it is
evident that an open ballot vote took place in the ordinary course
because the Speaker
had declined the ATM’s request for a secret
ballot – the decision the party now seeks to impugn. It
appeared
to us that unless the resolution adopted by the National
Assembly by that voting process was void and legally ineffectual
because
of the Speaker having declined the ATM’s request, it
would be academic for the court at this stage to pronounce on the
Speaker’s
decision. The ATM’s prayer for the
setting aside of the resolution was predicated solely on the alleged
illegality
of the Speaker’s determination that it be voted on
by open ballot. The deponent to ATM’s founding affidavit
averred
in this regard: “
the
proceedings of the Assembly are only irregular and unlawful because
it was straightjacketed to the Speaker’s unlawful
decision on
the voting procedure
”.
[39]
We required the parties to address argument
on the issue of mootness. We heard some argument on the
question during the hearing
of the oral arguments and afforded
counsel the opportunity to make additional submissions in writing
after judgment was reserved.
The Speaker and the ANC contended
that National Assembly’s resolutions were validly adopted and
that the question of whether
the ATM’s request for a secret
ballot should have been granted was accordingly moot. It was
contended that if the ATM
wanted to obtain an effective remedy from
the court it behoved it to have applied urgently for an interdict
prohibiting the National
Assembly from voting on the resolutions
until its challenge to the legality of the Speaker’s procedural
decision had been
determined.
[40]
The contention that the Assembly was
“straightjacketed” by the Speaker’s determination
appears to us to be unfounded.
The National Assembly’s
rules are silent on the issue of whether a vote on any question
related on a motion in terms of s 89
of the Constitution to
remove the President from office should be by open or secret ballot.
The Constitutional Court has
found that the Speaker has the power to
determine that they should be secret if that appears to her necessary
for the Assembly
to be able to fulfil its constitutional obligations,
but the Court also emphasised that, as provided in s 57(1)(a) of
the
Constitution, the Assembly is itself the ultimate master of its
internal arrangements, proceedings and procedures. It is
inconceivable that if the Speaker made a determination on voting
procedure that was unacceptable to the Assembly, it could not
overrule her. The Speaker could not force the Assembly to vote
on the resolution. By proceeding with the vote all the
participating members of the Assembly submitted to the Speaker’s
determination.
[41]
The validity of the Assembly’s
resolutions has to be determined with due regard to its original
powers and functions.
It is elected to represent the people and
to ensure government by the people under the Constitution. It
does that by choosing
the President (which the Constitution directs
it must do by secret vote), by providing a national forum for public
consideration
of issues, by passing legislation and by scrutinising
and overseeing executive action; see s 42(3) of the
Constitution.
Its members are subject to an oath of office that
binds them to be faithful to the Republic and to obey, respect
and uphold
the Constitution and includes a promise to perform their
functions as members of the Assembly to the best of their ability.
[42]
The “public consideration” of
issues includes not only debating them but also taking any
resolutions that are required
in respect of them. The
obligation on members to respect and uphold the Constitution demands
of them to conduct themselves
mindful of their collective duty, in
terms of s 59 of the Constitution, to ensure that the National
Assembly conducts its
business in an open manner and holds its
sittings and those of committees in public save when there is good
reason to exclude public
access. Their role as representatives
of the people is intrinsically bound up with the fourth of the
values, set out in s 1(d)
of the Constitution, on which the
post-Constitutional State is founded, viz. “
Universal
adult suffrage, a national common voters roll, regular elections and
a multi-party system of democratic government to
ensure
accountability, responsiveness and openness
”.
[43]
In
a constitutional system such as ours based on a separation of powers
between the legislative, executive and judicial branches
of the
state, the courts’ power to overturn a decision by the duly
elected legislature acting within its constitutional powers,
if it
exists at all, must be exercised in a way that is reconcilable with
an acknowledgement of and respect for the separation
of powers.
Even when a competent court exercises the expressly given power to
determine the constitutional validity of an
Act of Parliament or any
conduct of the President an order of constitutional invalidity has no
force unless it is confirmed by
the Constitutional Court.
[5]
In support of the proposition that only in instances of substantial
breaches of the constitutional order would a court set
aside a
decision of the National Assembly that on its face was made within
its constitutional powers, counsel for the ANC, in our
view
appositely, drew an analogy with the qualified acknowledgement by the
Constitutional Court in
Kham
and Others v Electoral Commission and Another
[2015] ZACC 37
(30 November
2015); 2016 (2) BCLR 157
(CC);
2016 (2)
SA 338
(CC) that “
overturning
an election is a serious business
”.
[6]
[44]
It does not seem to us to follow that a
resolution adopted in an open vote by the members of the National
Assembly on a motion that
the members have debated in public
proceedings as required by s 59 of the Constitution should be
susceptible to being set
aside by a court merely because before the
event a case could have been made out that the Speaker should have
directed that the
vote be secret one. The appropriateness of
the Speaker’s decision as to how the voting should be conducted
depends
on what she should reasonably have perceived and anticipated
the situation would probably be when voting took place. The
validity of the voting depends not on whether the vote was conducted
by open or secret ballot but whether members voted without
undue or
dishonest influence.
[45]
To
impugn a resolution of the National Assembly adopted in an open vote
it would have to be demonstrated that the members’
voting
rights were not exercised in the manner contemplated by the
Constitution. The validity of the votes exercised by the
members of the National Assembly is not dependent on the Speaker’s
decision whether the ballot should be open or secret.
As noted
by the Constitutional Court in
UDM
,
in an apparently approving reference to an observation of the
President’s counsel in that case, “
the
Constitution neither requires nor prohibits but in reality permits a
secret ballot
”.
[7]
[46]
A decision by the Speaker that a vote
should be conducted by secret ballot may in certain circumstances be
appropriate in order
to promote the effectiveness and efficiency of
Parliament, but if she makes the wrong call and a vote by open ballot
then proceeds
without any demonstrable illegality it cannot be
suggested that the members have cast their votes invalidly, for an
open vote is
not only permissible, it is also consistent with the
injunction in s 59(1)(b) of the Constitution and the founding
principles
of openness and accountability in s 1(d). (We
are not called upon in this case to determine whether the same
principle
would apply if a secret vote took place pursuant to an
unlawful choice by the Speaker.)
[47]
Rather like the position in respect of the
validity of elections, the validity of a vote of the National
Assembly falls to be determined
with reference to the circumstances
of the specific case; cf.
Kham
supra, at para 34. If, for example, the evidence showed that
the result of a vote in the Assembly had been materially affected
by
corruption or unlawful threats the validity of the Assembly’s
decision would be susceptible to being impugned in court
proceedings. A relevant breach of the overarching
constitutional principle of legality would have been demonstrated,
and
it would not be offensive to the separation of powers for a
competent court to intervene. That would be so irrespective of
whether the ballot had been open or closed.
[48]
Establishing
that members cast their votes in accordance with the directions of
the political party to which they belonged would
not be sufficient,
by itself, to establish that their voting rights were not effectively
exercised. Under the electoral system
that currently prevails
members of the Assembly derive their membership of the Assembly based
on their deployment to Parliament
by a political party.
[8]
It was the party, rather than any individual, for which the citizens
voted in the elections pursuant to which the National
Assembly was
constituted. It is well known, and only to be expected, that
there will typically be a diversity of views and
political
philosophies in the membership of any political party, but that for
electoral and governance purposes, if it is a party
in government,
and for electoral purposes, if it is in opposition, members’
individual opinions must, for the sake of organisational
coherence,
generally be subordinated to those adopted by the party as a unit.
[49]
It
is not unacceptable in open and democratic constitutional
dispensations for a parliamentary party to direct its representatives
in a legislature to vote in accordance with the party’s
predetermined position on the motion concerned. That is where
the role of party whips comes into play. The term apparently
originates in foxhunting parlance, where a “
whipper-in
”
is “
a
huntsman's assistant who brings straying hounds back into the
pack
”.
[9]
The use of party whips is a common feature in legislatures
which replicate or are closely related to the so-called Westminster
system.
[10]
Equivalents
to party whips are also found in other legislatures. In Italy
and Spain, for example, political parties
appoint representatives
from their number to enforce party discipline in the
legislatures.
[11]
[50]
The
system of whips does not, of course, mean that a member of the
National assembly is obliged to vote in accordance with his or
her
party’s direction. It cannot mean that because members
cannot allow their party’s directions to override
their oath of
office. It means only that if they do not follow party
directions, they lay themselves open to party discipline,
which might
entail expulsion from the party and a consequent loss of their seat.
That, however, is an inherent feature of
a party-based electoral
system; it does not expose members of the Assembly to what the
Constitutional Court referred to as “illegitimate
hardships”
[12]
.
The party-political landscape in South Africa has been a constantly
evolving one since the beginning of parliamentary democracy
based on
universal adult suffrage in 1994. It is common knowledge that a
number of party-political schisms and mergers during
that period have
given rise to a number of new parties.
[51]
A death threat against a single member of a
400-member legislature also does not seem to us to provide a
sufficient basis for a
court to intervene by invalidating a
resolution adopted by the legislature. As it was, the person in
question, Mr Mervyn
Dirks of the ANC, disregarded party instructions
and voted in favour of accepting the independent panel’s
report.
[52]
As
mentioned, the only basis upon which the ATM sought to impugn the
National Assembly’s resolution not to accept the report
of the
independent panel was that the open ballot procedure used for the
vote followed on the allegedly unlawful refusal by the
Speaker of its
request for a secret vote. It should be clear from the
preceding paragraphs that we do not accept that is
sufficient basis
for this court, assuming it has the jurisdiction to do so,
[13]
to set aside the resolution. The decision of the National
Assembly consequently stands. In the face of that fact, the
ATM’s challenge to the Speaker’s decision to refuse its
request for a secret ballot is manifestly moot.
[53]
Lest we be wrong in our conclusions
concerning the mootness of the relief sought in the two applications
in respect of the Speaker’s
decision, we nevertheless proceed
to explain why we consider that the challenges were in any event bad.
[54]
According to the ATM, the Speaker’s
decisions were unlawful for three separate and self-standing reasons:
First
, the
Speaker made an error in law by applying an incorrect test when she
took the decision to prescribe an open ballot procedure
as the voting
mechanism for the National Assembly’s voting proceedings in
both matters. She regarded “
openness”
as the default position for the
proceedings and, contrary to the SCA’s decision in the
ATM
case, required the ATM to discharge an onus demonstrating
“
extraordinary circumstances”
to warrant the adoption of a closed
ballot procedure;
secondly
,
the Speaker’s decision was substantively and procedurally
irrational as she ignored relevant considerations concerning the
toxic political environment and failed to consider the instruction by
the ANC to its members, under the threat of disciplinary
action, to
vote against establishing an impeachment committee - action which the
ATM alleged undermined the Assembly’s duty
to hold the
President accountable; and,
thirdly
,
the Speaker’s decision was taken in bad faith as she was
determined to adopt an open ballot procedure regardless of the
facts
placed before her.
[55]
One of the main arguments advanced by ATM’s
counsel was that, despite the SCA decision in the
ATM
case,
the Speaker on 16 February 2022
and 9 March 2022, applied a default position in favour of an open
ballot and thus committed an error
of law. In support of the latter
argument, the underlined portions of the letter dated 16 February
2022 were relied upon, namely:
1.
These factors do not lead me to
conclude that openness and transparency should not prevail,
…
.
2.
In this prevailing environment
I have had to decide whether a secret ballot
procedure is appropriate in light of other constitutional
imperatives, including the
foundational Constitutional principle of
“openness”, as set out in section 1(d) of the
Constitution, 1996, as a guide
to our democratic order. I am equally
cognisant of the Constitutional requirement as set out in section
59(1)(b) that the National
Assembly must conduct its proceedings in
an open manner.
This is the
manner in which we conduct our business and the NA Rules are crafted
to give effect to these principles unless required
otherwise by the
constitution, and now indeed the courts.
[56]
In the Speaker’s letter of 9 March
2022, the following underlined portions were relied upon:
“
In
this letter I will not repeat the contents of my letter dated 16
February 2022, except to state that
openness
remains the default position
and
guiding principle that informs how the National Assembly must conduct
its proceedings
and that since my
last letter to you there has been no change in this substantive legal
and Constitutional framework to compel a
deviation from this
position
…..”
[57]
As mentioned, the ATM also argued the real
reason for declining the ATM’s request for a secret ballot in
respect of the vote
on the independent panel’s report was made
known by the Speaker on 5 December 2022, at the programming committee
of the National
Assembly when she said the following “
You
know that once you say secret ballot, it has to be extraordinary
circumstances, and that is the only reason why you were not
granted a
secret ballot.”
[58]
According to the ATM, the Speaker had with
that statement let slip that the real reason for her decision was the
failure of the
ATM to demonstrate the existence of “
extraordinary
circumstances”
- a reason
not disclosed in her abovementioned letter of 4 December 2022. It
was further argued that the Speaker deliberately
ignored the SCA
judgment in the
ATM
case and was determined to exercise her power with a default position
in mind.
[59]
The
legal principles applicable to the exercise of the Speaker’s
discretion were settled in
UDM
.
[14]
The National Assembly
has made rules in terms of s 57 of the Constitution.
[15]
The rules make provision for the determination of the voting
procedure for a motion of no confidence tabled at a particular
time. Rule 102 says that “[u]nless the Constitution
provides otherwise voting takes place in accordance with Rules
103 or
104”. Rule 103 provides:
“
(1) At
a sitting of the House held in a Chamber where an electronic voting
system is in operation, unless the presiding officer
directs
otherwise, questions are decided by the utilisation of such system in
accordance with a procedure predetermined by the
Speaker and
directives as announced by the presiding officer.
(2) Members
may vote only from the seats allocated to them individually in the
Chamber.
(3) Members
vote by pressing the ‘Yes’, ‘No’ or ‘Abstain’
button on the electronic consoles
at their seats when directed by the
presiding officer to cast their votes.
(4) A
member who is unable to cast his or her vote, must draw this to the
attention of the Chair and may in person or through
a whip of his or
her party inform the Secretary at the Table of his or her vote.
(5) When
all members have cast their votes, the presiding officer must
immediately announce the result of the division.
(6) Members’
names and votes must be printed in the Minutes of Proceedings.”
[60]
And rule 104
reads:
“
(1) Where
no electronic voting system is in operation, a manual voting system
may be used in accordance with a procedure predetermined
by the
Speaker and directives to be announced by the presiding officer.
(2) When
members’ votes have been counted, the presiding officer must
immediately announce the result of the division.
(3) If
the manual voting procedure
permits
, members’ names
and votes must be printed in the Minutes of Proceedings.”
[61]
Sub-rules
(1) and (3) of rule 104 permit the Speaker to have “
.[e]ven
a motion of no confidence in the President voted on by secret
ballot. But, when a secret ballot would be appropriate,
is an
eventuality that has not been expressly provided for and which then
falls on the Speaker to determine. That is her
judgement call
to make, having due regard to what would be the best procedure to
ensure that Members exercise their oversight powers
most
effectively. And that is something she may ‘predetermine’
as envisaged in rule 104(1).”
[16]
[62]
In
making a decision whether a vote should be by secret rather than open
ballot, the Speaker exercises a discretion that is situation-specific
and involves taking into account all the prevailing circumstances.
Furthermore, as stated in
UDM
,
‘
the
power
that vests in the Speaker to determine the voting procedure in a
motion of no confidence, belongs to the people and must thus
not be
exercised arbitrarily or whimsically. Nor is it open-ended and
unguided. It is exercisable subject to constraints.
The
primary constraint being that it must be used for the purpose it was
given to the Speaker – facilitation of the
effectiveness of
Parliament’s accountability mechanisms
’.
[17]
[63]
The
Constitutional Court, in explaining the various potential advantages
for accountability a secret ballot procedure may have,
also pointed
out the potential disadvantages, stating:
“
When
the risk that inheres in voting in defiance of the instructions of
one’s party is evaluated, it must be counter-balanced
with the
apparent difficulty of being removed from the Assembly.
Openness is one of our foundational values. And the
Assembly’s
internal arrangements, proceedings and procedures must have due
regard to the need to uphold the value of transparency
in carrying
out the business of the Assembly. The electorate is at times
entitled to know how their representatives carry
out even some of
their most sensitive obligations, such as passing a motion of
no confidence. They are not supposed
to always operate
under the cover of secrecy. Considerations of transparency and
openness sometimes demand a display of courage
and the resoluteness
to boldly advance the best interests of those they represent no
matter the consequences, including the risk
of dismissal for
non-compliance with the party’s instructions. These
factors must also be reflected upon by the Speaker
when considering
whether voting is to be by secret or open ballot.
Some
consequences are adverse or injurious not so much to individuals, as
they are to our constitutional democracy. Crass
dishonesty, in
the form of bribe-taking or other illegitimate methods of gaining
undeserved majorities, must not be discounted
from the Speaker’s
decision-making process. Anybody, including Members of
Parliament or of the Judiciary anywhere in
the world, could
potentially be “bought”. When that happens in a
motion of no confidence, the outcome could betray
the people’s
best interests. This possibility must not be lightly or naively
taken out of the equation as a necessarily
far removed and negligible
possibility when the stakes are too high. For, when money or
oiled hands determine the voting
outcome, particularly in a matter of
such monumental importance, then no conscience or oath finds
expression.
The
correct exercise of Parliament’s powers in relation to a motion
of no confidence in the President, must therefore
have the
effect of ensuring that the voting process is not a fear or
money-inspired sham but a genuine motion for the effective
enforcement of accountability. When that is so, the distant but
real possibility of being removed from office for good reason
would
serve the original and essential purpose of encouraging public
office-bearers to be accountable and fulfil their constitutional
obligations.’
[18]
[64]
It
is against that backdrop that the ATM’s complaints must be
considered.
The
courts have stressed repeatedly that a rationality review does not
provide an opportunity for a party or the court to substitute
their
preferred views for that of the empowered decision maker.
Furthermore, a level of deference by the court is appropriate when
it
assesses the integrity of a decision that has been taken on judicial
review. This is especially so where matters involve
polycentric
decision-making falling within the special expertise of a decision
making body.
[19]
In our
view it is also so where there is a danger of the judiciary trenching
on the constitutional domain of another arm
of government.
[20]
The sensitivity of involvement by the courts in respect of
challenges mounted in the parliamentary context to decisions that
are
heavily political in character was recognized in the Constitutional
Court’s judgment in
Economic
Freedom Fighters v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others;
Democratic Alliance v Speaker of the National Assembly
and Others
[2016] ZACC 11
(31 March
2016); 2016 (5) BCLR 618
(CC);
2016 (3) SA
580
(CC).
[65]
The ATM’s
attacks on the Speaker’s decisions appear to us to be premised
on a cherry-picking analysis of the Speaker’s
letters and
statements. The Speaker’s reasons, considered
holistically,
do not support the ATM’s contention
that she failed to
appreciate ‘
how
‘ to go about making her decision or that she acted
irrationally in making it.
[66]
The
Speaker’s reasons show that she considered the broad conspectus
of prevailing circumstances and weighed them with the
pertinent
constitutional values and provisions in mind. The ATM’s
requests for secret ballots required of the Speaker
in each instance
to make a judgement call. Making a judgement call requires of a
decision-maker to identify the relevant
facts and to weigh their
effect with reference to whatever objective considerations are
applicable to the issue in hand.
The weight to be given to any
feature of the issue in arriving at a determination is a matter for
the decision-maker. If
it is apparent that the decision-maker
has applied her mind to the relevant facts and considerations her
decision cannot easily
be characterised as arbitrary or whimsical.
It could be described as irrational only if there were a material
disconnection
between the decision she made and the matters she took
into account in making it.
[67]
It
is not open to the ATM to maintain that the decisions were unlawful
merely because it disagrees with the Speaker’s judgement.
It has not identified anything material that the Speaker failed to
take into account. We have explained why we do not consider
that the Speaker was in any misdirected in not attaching the
significance to the ANC’s instruction to its members to vote
against acceptance of the independent panel’s report that the
ATM considered she should have.
[68]
We
are also unpersuaded by the ATM’s criticism of the Speaker’s
decisions because of the weight that she applied to
the principle of
openness in arriving at them.
According
to the arguments advanced, the Speaker thereby went against the SCA’s
judgment in the
ATM
case. We do not agree. The SCA in the
ATM
judgment held that no onus burdened a party requesting a secret
ballot. The implication is that the Speaker must consider
such
requests with an open mind, judging the request inquisitorially
rather accusatorially. We think it would be a startling
proposition, however, to suggest that the SCA’s judgment in the
ATM
case implies that the Speaker does not have to consider such requests
mindful of the applicable constitutional values and principles.
The SCA’s judgment in the ATM case did not refer to sections
1(d) and 59(1)(b) of the Constitution, but it is clear that
the SCA
did not intend to differ from anything in the Constitutional Court’s
judgment in
UDM
,
where (also without reference to s 59(1)(b)) it was acknowledged
that in making the decision the Speaker would have to have
appropriate regard to the founding value of openness.
[69]
The SCA’s
reference to “the slate being clean” when the Speaker is
called upon to make a judgment call as to whether
there should be a
secret ballot cannot be construed to mean that she must approach the
matter with a vacuous mind. It means
no more than that she must
not approach it on the basis that as a matter of principle there
should not be a secret ballot.
That is not the same as saying
that in making her determination she must not have in mind the
relevant constitutional values and
provisions. It also does
amount to the SCA purporting to prescribe to the Speaker the weight
she should attach to openness
and accountability when deciding in a
given case whether a ballot should be secret. To construe the
ATM judgment to that
effect would be to set it at odds with the
Constitutional Court’s judgment in
UDM
,
on which the SCA, understandably, relied heavily in its reasoning.
That would be counterintuitive.
[70]
The
evidence leaves us in no doubt that the Speaker placed great weight
on the importance of the Assembly’s proceedings generally
being
conducted in an open manner. It appears to us that it was in
that context that she said that, save where expressly
provided for in
the Constitution, secret ballots were used in “extraordinary
circumstances”. “Extraordinary”
connotes
something “very unusual”.
[21]
We think this Court can take judicial notice that it is very
unusually that decisions are made by secret ballot in the National
Assembly except when prescribed by the Constitution. Having
regard to the obvious importance of openness and accountability
if
the National Assembly is to effectively fulfil its representative
role on behalf of the people and to the express provisions
of the
Constitution that give voice to it, we find no basis to fault the
Speaker’s approach. It did not come down to
placing an
onus on the ATM.
[71]
We consider that the
ATM has read too much into the Speaker’s statement in her
letter dated 9 March 2022 that “
openness
remains the default position
”
.
It is clear to us, given the Speaker’s earlier reference to
s 59(1)(b) of the Constitution, that she was doing
nothing more
than reiterating in her own words the import of that provision.
There was nothing untoward in that. The
Constitution does
enjoin the National Assembly to conduct its business in an open
manner but does not exclude exceptions to the
general rule when those
are reasonable.
[72]
In our
judgment, nothing in the evidence supports the ATM’s allegation
that the Speaker acted in bad faith.
[73]
For all of the
aforegoing reasons the applications will be dismissed. It needs to be
mentioned that in this instance the Speaker
did not seek a costs
order against the ATM.
[74]
Before
concluding, however, as promised, we turn to discuss the manner in
which the EFF participated in these proceedings.
[75]
Civil
proceedings in the High Court are governed by the Uniform Rules of
Court. The EFF’s participation did not occur
in a manner
provided for in the Uniform Rules.
[76]
Rule 6 is the
rule primarily regulating proceedings instituted by application.
A party cited as a respondent in application
proceedings has to be
given an opportunity to oppose the application. The applicant
is entitled to set an application down
for hearing as an unopposed
matter if none of the respondents gives notice of an intention to
oppose it. A respondent who
wishes to oppose an application is
required within a stipulated period after it has given notice of an
intention to oppose to deliver
its answering affidavits or if it
intends to raise any question of law only to deliver a notice setting
forth such question. The
applicant can thereafter deliver replying
affidavits within a stipulated period, whereafter the applicant, or
failing that the
respondent, can set the application down for
hearing.
[77]
There is no
provision in the rules for a respondent in motion proceedings to
deliver supporting papers thereby making itself in
effect a
co-applicant. If a respondent wishes to be a principal party in
obtaining the relief sought by the applicant, it
should apply to be
joined as a co-applicant so that the other respondents in the matter
can answer the case put up by it and so
that the exchange of papers
and subsequent hearing can proceed in the structured manner
contemplated by the rules. On any
approach, a respondent which
chooses to act as if it were a co-applicant must expect to find
itself treated as a co-applicant for
costs purposes should any of the
opposing respondents ask for a costs order against it.
[78]
In the result
following orders are issued:
In
case no. 7186/2022:
(a)
The
application is dismissed.
(b)
The applicant
shall pay the costs of suit of third respondent including the fees of
two counsel.
In
case no. 21574/2022:
(a)
The
application is dismissed.
(b)
The applicant
shall pay the costs of suit of third respondent including the costs
of two counsel.
______________
LE
GRANGE, J
_______________
BINNS-WARD,
J
____________
THULARE,
J
Legal Representatives:
For
the ATM
:
Advocates Mr. Anton Katz,
SC assisted by Messrs. MFundo Mhambi and Kessler Perumalsamy.
Instructed by Ashersons
Attorneys.
For
the Speaker
:
Advocates Mr. Steven
Budlender, SC assisted by Ms. Ncumiso Mayosi.
Instructed by the State
Attorney.
For The ANC:
Advocates Mr. Tembeka
Ngcukaitobi, SC assited by Mesdames. Lerato Zikilala, Natali
Chesi-Buthelezi and Mr. Ntokozo Qwabe.
Instructed by K N
Attorneys.
For the EFF:
Advocate Mr. Mfesane-
Sibito.
Instructed
by Levitt Attorneys.
[1]
United
Democratic Movement v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others
[2017] ZACC 21
(22 June
2017); 2017 (8) BCLR 1061
(CC);
2017 (5) SA
300
(CC).
[2]
In
this case the Speaker of the National Assembly refused a request by
the UDM, a political party, to direct that the voting in
a scheduled
motion of no confidence in the President of South Africa be
conducted by secret ballot. The Speaker’s reasons
for the
refusal were that neither the Constitution nor the Rules of the
National Assembly (the Rules) gave her that power. According
to the
Speaker she was further prevented from doing so by the High Court’s
finding in
Tlouamma
and Others v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others
2016 (1) SA 534
(WCC). The Constitutional Court held at para 58-59,
64, 67-68 and 91, that the National Assembly under its powers in
terms of
s 57 of the Constitution to determine its own procedures
and which procedure would best advance the Constitution. The Court
held
that the National Assembly therefore had the power to determine
whether voting on a motion of no confidence in the President would
be open or secret ballot. It was further held that it is for the
National Assembly to determine which voting procedure was necessary
for the efficiency and effectiveness of the institution in holding
the Executive accountable. Furthermore, the Rules effectively
empowers the Speaker to have a motion of no confidence in the
President voted on by secret ballot. It was also held that to the
extent that
Tlouamma
may be understood as having held that secret –ballot procedure
was not at all constitutionally permissible, that was incorrect.
The
Speaker’s decision was accordingly held to be invalid and was
set aside.
[3]
[2016]
ZASCA 197
(6 December 2016); [2017] 1 All SA 354 (SCA); 2017 (3)
BCLR 364 (SCA); 2017 (3) SA 152 (SCA).
[4]
There
is more than just a grain of truth in the observation attributed to
the former UK Prime Minister, Harold Wilson, that “
A
week is a long time in politics
”.
[5]
Section
172(2) of the Constitution.
[6]
At
para 98, citing (in n75) Opitz v Wrzesnewkyj
[2013] 3 SCR 76
(SCC)
at para 87 and certain other North American authority.
[7]
In
para xx, see also para 64.
[8]
There
have not yet been any elections for the National Assembly under the
Electoral Amendment Act, 2023, which permits individuals
to make
themselves available for election as independent members of the
Assembly.
[9]
Oxford
Dictionary of the English Language.
[10]
In
Australia, Canada, India and New Zealand, for example.
Interestingly, the Constitution of India, like the SA Constitution,
provides (in s 55(3)) for the election of the President of
India by secret ballot. Votes by secret ballot are obviously
not subject to control by party whips.
[11]
In
Spain, the equivalent of the party whip (known as the
portuvoz
or
portuvoz
adjunto
)
casts the party’s votes on behalf of its members in the
legislature; see article by the political scientist, Manuel Sánchez
de Dios, “
Parliamentary
Discipline in Spain
”
on the Complutense University of Madrid website
https://www.ucm.es/data/cont/docs/862-2019-12-01-Snachez%20de%20Dios-%20Party%20discipline%20in%20Sapin.pdf
(accessed
22 April 2023).
[12]
Cf.
UDM
supra, at para 88, and see
Certification
of the Constitution of Republic of South Africa
[1996] ZACC 26
;
1996 (4) SA 744
(CC);
1996 (10) BCLR 1253
(CC) at
para 186.
[13]
It
may be that a vitiating illegality in a vote in the context of
Parliamentary proceedings in terms of s 89 of the Constitution
would engage the exclusive jurisdiction of the Constitutional Court
in terms of s 167(4)(e) of the Constitution.
[14]
UDM
para 67-68
[15]
Section 57(1)
provides that: “The National Assembly may—
(a)
determine and control its internal arrangements, proceedings and
procedures; and
(b) make
rules and orders concerning its business, with due regard to
representative and participatory democracy,
accountability,
transparency and public involvement.”
[16]
UDM
at
para 68.
[17]
Id.
para 86.
[18]
UDM
paras
80-82.
[19]
Bato
Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs and
Tourism and Others
[2004] ZACC 15
(12 March
[2004] ZACC 15
;
2004); 2004 (4) SA 490
(CC);
2004 (7) BCLR
687
(CC) at para 45-49 and
Bapedi
Marota Mamone v Commission on Traditional Leadership Disputes and
Claims
[2014]
ZACC 36
(15 December
2014); 2015 (3) BCLR 268
(CC), majority
judgment at para 78-79. The judgments were concerned with a
review of administrative action, but the rule
logically also applies
when courts assess the rationality of decisions in legality reviews.
[20]
Cf.
National
Treasury and Others v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance and
Others
[2012] ZACC 18
(20 September
2012); 2012 (6) SA 223
(CC);
2012
(11) BCLR 1148
(CC) at para 63-66
[21]
See
the definition of “
extraordinary
”
in the
Oxford
Dictionary of the English Language
.
sino noindex
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