Case Law[2022] ZACC 31South Africa
AmaBhungane Centre for Investigative Journalism NPC v President of the Republic of South Africa (CCT 385/21) [2022] ZACC 31; 2023 (2) SA 1 (CC); 2023 (5) BCLR 499 (CC) (20 September 2022)
Constitutional Court of South Africa
20 September 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Executive Ethics Code, Proclamation No. R41 of 2000 — constitutionality of the Code — order of constitutional invalidity confirmed
Judgment
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## AmaBhungane Centre for Investigative Journalism NPC v President of the Republic of South Africa (CCT 385/21) [2022] ZACC 31; 2023 (2) SA 1 (CC); 2023 (5) BCLR 499 (CC) (20 September 2022)
AmaBhungane Centre for Investigative Journalism NPC v President of the Republic of South Africa (CCT 385/21) [2022] ZACC 31; 2023 (2) SA 1 (CC); 2023 (5) BCLR 499 (CC) (20 September 2022)
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sino date 20 September 2022
CONSTITUTIONAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case
CCT 385/21
In
the matter between:
AMABHUNGANE
CENTRE FOR INVESTIGATIVE
JOURNALISM
NPC
Applicant
and
PRESIDENT
OF THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
Respondent
and
JOHANNESBURG
SOCIETY OF ADVOCATES
Amicus Curiae
Neutral
citation:
AmaBhungane Centre for Investigative Journalism
NPC v President of the Republic of South Africa
[2022]
ZACC 31
Coram:
Kollapen J, Madlanga J, Majiedt J, Mathopo J,
Mhlantla J, Theron J, Tshiqi J and Unterhalter AJ
Judgment:
Majiedt J (unanimous)
Heard
on:
31 May 2022
Decided
on:
20 September 2022
Summary:
Executive Ethics Code, Proclamation No.
R41 of 2000 — constitutionality of the Code — order of
constitutional invalidity
confirmed
Executive Members’
Ethics Act 82 of 1998
—
section 2(2)(c)
— transparency —
access to information — meaning of “any financial
interest”
ORDER
On
application for confirmation of the order of the High Court of
South Africa, Gauteng Division, Pretoria (Mlambo JP,
Keightley J and Matojane J):
1.
The order of the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng Division,
Pretoria, declaring the Executive
Ethics Code published
under
Proclamation No. R41 of 2000,
to be
inconsistent with the Constitution and invalid to the extent that it
does not require the disclosure of donations made to
campaigns for
positions within political parties, is confirmed.
2.
The operation of the order is suspended for a period of 12 months
to enable the respondent
to remedy the defect.
3.
The respondent must pay the applicant’s costs, including costs
of two counsel, in this
Court.
JUDGMENT
MAJIEDT J
(Kollapen J, Madlanga J, Mathopo J, Mhlantla J, Theron J,
Tshiqi J and Unterhalter AJ):
[1]
Politics
and money make disquieting bedfellows. This case is about money in
politics, more particularly money donated to election
campaigns for
positions within political parties. The central question for
determination is whether there ought to be a duty in
law to disclose
those donations. In this regard, we must determine whether the
Executive Ethics Code (the Code), enacted in 2000
by the then
President of the Republic of South Africa in terms of
section 96(1) of the Constitution,
[1]
passes constitutional muster.
[2]
The Full Court of the Gauteng
Division, Pretoria (Full Court), declared that the Code was
unconstitutional and unlawful to
the extent that it did not require
the disclosure of donations made to campaigns for positions within
political parties. The declaration
of unconstitutionality was
suspended for 12 months. The matter is before this Court for
confirmation of the declaration of
invalidity. As will appear, the
matter has travelled a circuitous route to end up here.
Parties
[3]
The
applicant is amaBhungane Centre for Investigative Journalism NPC
(amaBhungane), a non-profit company incorporated under the
Companies
Act.
[2]
The respondent is the
President of the Republic of South Africa. The President has filed a
notice of intention to abide these proceedings.
That prompted this
Court to request the Johannesburg Society of Advocates (the Society)
to appoint counsel to assist us by preparing
written submissions and
presenting oral argument in the confirmation proceedings. The Society
graciously acceded to this request
and counsel who appeared have been
of commendable assistance to this Court, for which we are indebted.
Before the Full Court,
the President elected not to file
answering papers, but confined his participation to the advancement
of oral submissions by counsel
in opposition to amaBhungane’s
constitutional challenge.
Litigation
history
High
Court: initial review application and constitutional challenge
[4]
On 31 July 2019, the President
applied to the Gauteng Provincial Division of the High Court,
Pretoria (High Court), for extensive
relief against the
Public Protector, including reviewing and setting aside findings
and remedial actions the Public Protector
made in a report she
rendered against the President. That report, number 37
of 2019/2020 and bearing the title “Report
on an
investigation into a violation of the Executive Ethics Code through
an improper relationship between the President and African
Global
Operations (AGO), formerly known as BOSASA” (the Report), was
released by the Public Protector on 19 July 2019.
One of the key
findings in the Report was that the President had breached his duties
under the Code, in that, among other things,
he had failed to
disclose donations that had been made to an internal party political
campaign that supported his election
as President of the African
National Congress (ANC), commonly known as “the CR17 campaign”.
[5]
The Speaker of the National Assembly
and the National Director of Public Prosecutions joined as applicants
in that review application,
while the Public Protector and the
Economic Freedom Fighters (the EFF), a political party represented in
the National Assembly,
opposed the relief sought.
[6]
On 6 November 2019, amaBhungane
applied to intervene as a party or to be admitted as amicus curiae in
the review application. It
indicated in its intervention application
that, if permitted to intervene, the following relief would be
sought:
“
1.
In the event that the Executive Ethics Code, 2000 (‘the Code’)
is held not to require the
disclosure of donations made to campaigns
for positions within political parties:
1.1
It is declared that the Code is unconstitutional, unlawful and
invalid to this extent.”
[7]
The basis for this relief, contended
amaBhungane, was that “the Code . . . fails to meet the
obligations imposed by the Constitution
and the [Ethics Act] and/or
is unconstitutionally and impermissibly vague”. AmaBhungane
thus brought a constitutional challenge
to the Code by way of a
conditional counter application through an application to
intervene in the review proceedings. The
application was conditional
on the interpretation placed on the Code and, more particularly,
whether the Code required members
of the executive to make
disclosure of donations made to internal party-political campaigns.
[8]
The High Court granted amaBhungane
leave to intervene; and any party wishing to file an affidavit in
answer to the relief sought
by amaBhungane in the review application,
was granted leave to file such affidavit. The President elected not
to file an answering
affidavit in response to the conditional
constitutional challenge.
[9]
The
High Court granted the President’s application to review the
findings in the Report, including the finding that he had
breached
the Code by failing to disclose donations to the CR17 campaign. The
High Court, however, dismissed amaBhungane’s
conditional
counter-application on the basis that its constitutional challenge
had not been properly raised and without determining
the merits of
that challenge.
[3]
Strangely though, nothing was said in the High Court’s order
about the relief sought by amaBhungane, but in its judgment,
after
describing amaBhungane’s case as compelling, that Court
dismissed the challenge as not having been properly raised.
This
Court: initial review and constitutional challenge
[10]
Having
granted leave, on appeal, this Court dismissed the Public Protector’s
appeal and remitted amaBhungane’s
constitutional challenge to
the High Court.
[4]
This Court held that the High Court ought to have considered the
constitutional challenge on its merits as it was properly
before that
Court. This Court refrained from saying anything at all about the
constitutional validity of the Code, mindful that
this issue would
still have to be decided by the High Court upon remittal.
Full
Court: constitutional challenge to the Code
[11]
At
the directive of the Judge President of the Gauteng Provincial
Division, a Full Court was constituted to hear amaBhungane’s
challenge to the constitutional validity of the Code.
[5]
The President again did not file any answering papers in response to
this constitutional challenge. Legal argument was, however,
presented
on his behalf in opposition to the constitutional challenge. None of
the other parties who were part of the review application
in the High
Court and the subsequent appeal to this Court played an active
role in this second round of litigation on remittal
to the
High Court.
[12]
The Full Court upheld the
constitutional challenge and declared the Code unconstitutional
and invalid. It granted an order
as follows:
“
1.
It is declared that the Executive Ethics Code, published under
Proclamation No. R41 of 2000, is
unconstitutional, unlawful and
invalid insofar as it does not require the disclosure by Members who
are subject to the Code of
donations made to campaigns for their
election to positions within political parties.
2.
The declaration of invalidity shall have no retrospective effect and
shall be suspended for
a period of 12 months to allow for the defect
to be remedied.
3.
The respondent is directed to pay the applicant’s costs, which
are to include those
of two counsel, one being Senior Counsel.”
This
Court: constitutional challenge to the Code
AmaBhungane’s
submissions
[13]
According to amaBhungane,
the
legal question is whether the Code is constitutionally compliant
in the manner in which it deals with the disclosure of
donations to
campaigns for positions within political parties. AmaBhungane
explains that the relief is forward-looking and emphasises
that its
challenge is whether in future Ministers, Deputy Ministers and
Members of the Executive Council (MECs) will be required
to make
public disclosure of donations made to campaigns for their election
to internal party positions. The relief does not seek
to reach into
the past and will thus not prejudice any of the Ministers, Deputy
Ministers or MECs who made disclosures in terms
of the current Code,
as they did so in accordance with the then extant Code.
[14]
AmaBhungane
contends that the provisions of the Executive Members’
Ethics Act
[6]
(Ethics Act)
require that the Code must ensure that members of the executive do
not place themselves in positions that may compromise
their ability
to discharge their duties without any undue influence –
including accepting undisclosed financial contributions.
It is
further submitted that section 2(2)(c) of the Ethics Act plainly
requires that the Code cast a wide net in relation
to the financial
interests that a member of the executive may possibly have. It does
this by providing that the Code must
require members of the
executive to disclose
all
of their financial interests on assumption of office and
any
financial
interests after assumption of office. That section enumerates
the type of financial interests that the disclosure
should include.
Consistent with the wide net the section seeks to cast, it provides
that disclosure should not only be of the member
concerned, but it
should also be of persons within their family or others who may have
a familial or close connection with that
member. AmaBhungane contends
that the breadth of these duties is confirmed when one considers
South Africa’s international
law obligations with
reference to Article 18 of the United Nations Convention
Against Corruption.
[7]
[15]
AmaBhungane further submits that the
very point of the disclosure required in paragraphs 5 and 6 of
the Code is to allow political
parties, the media and the public to
know which persons or entities are providing private financial
support or benefits to those
who hold public office. AmaBhungane
stresses that this transparency is essential in
order to guard against potential corruption, conflicts of interest
and the like.
It
further contends that, to
the extent that the Code does not require the disclosure of all
donations made to campaigns for positions
within political parties
for the benefit of members of the executive, this breaches sections
1, 7(2), 19, 32, 96 and 195 of the
Constitution; and it breaches the
Ethics Act.
[16]
AmaBhungane
also submits that the imperative of section 7(2) of
the Constitution, that requires the state to “respect,
protect, promote and fulfil the rights” contained in the Bill
of Rights, starkly illustrates the obligations on the state.
The
provisions of section 96, read with section 2(1) of the Ethics Act,
and taking into account the provisions of Article 7(3)
of the United
Nations Convention Against Corruption,
[8]
confirm these obligations. Furthermore, amaBhungane submits that
there are two added dimensions in the present case: the right
to make
political choices and to vote (section 19 of the Constitution);
and the right of access to information (section 32
of
the Constitution). As held by this Court in the review judgment,
the Code only requires disclosure where there is
a personal
benefit to the Minister, Deputy Minister or MEC. This partial
disclosure obligation, contends amaBhungane, is manifestly
insufficient to meet the relevant constitutional and statutory
obligations as it permits members of the executive to avoid having
to
make disclosure by structuring their campaign funding in such a way
that it falls outside the personal benefit requirement.
[17]
In
invoking
My
Vote Counts II
,
[9]
amaBhungane contends that this Court has made plain that the
reasons for requiring mandatory disclosure of party political
funding
donations are to enable members of the public to properly and
meaningfully exercise their constitutional rights, and to
act as a
bulwark against corruption. AmaBhungane submits that neither of these
aims can be achieved when members of the executive
can structure
their campaigns to avoid disclosure. It further submits that if the
Code is to meet the obligation set by section
2(1) of the Ethics Act,
to prescribe rules “promoting open, democratic and accountable
government”, it must require
disclosure of all donations,
whether personally beneficial or otherwise, made to internal
campaigns within political parties.
[18]
AmaBhungane submits that the Code is
vague as it is extraordinarily difficult to know in advance when a
member of the executive
will have to disclose donations. It submits
that this is a serious problem, not only for Parliament as it seeks
to enforce the Code
against Ministers, but also for the public
media as they try to hold Ministers to account. AmaBhungane further
submits that the
vagueness of the Code in dealing with internal
campaign donations assists no-one at all and undermines the very
purpose of the Code.
Additionally, amaBhungane points to the
arbitrary manner in which the Code deals with campaign
donations. It furnishes hypothetical
examples of that arbitrariness.
[19]
AmaBhungane emphasises that it
should not matter whether the Minister, Deputy Minister or MEC
ultimately wins or loses the internal
party election and it also
should not matter whether or not a win in the internal party election
ultimately translates into more
impressive executive office.
AmaBhungane submits that what matters instead is that a private
company is using its funds to contribute
to a campaign to promote the
candidacy of a particular person within party-political elections.
Once that person becomes a member
of the executive, the donation must
be disclosed to the public. It is only with this disclosure that the
public will be “better
able to detect any post election
special favours that may be given in return”. And only with
that disclosure will Ministers,
Deputy Ministers and MECs be inclined
to steer clear of “characters or entities that could influence
them negatively, for
the advancement of personal or sectoral
interests” and thus be left “free to honour their
declared priorities and constitutional
obligations”.
[20]
Ultimately, amaBhungane submits that
the Code fails to comply with the Ethics Act and the
Constitution to the extent that
it fails to require disclosure of all
donations to internal campaigns within political parties. To this
extent, the Code is
unlawful, unconstitutional and invalid, as
the Full Court rightly found.
[21]
On the issue of an appropriate
remedy, amaBhungane submits that in the circumstances, this Court
is required to confirm the
declaration of constitutional invalidity
to the extent that the Code fails to require the disclosure of
all donations made
to campaigns for positions within political
parties. AmaBhungane accepts that such a declaration of invalidity
should have no retrospective
effect. This is because national and
provincial members of the executive took the Code as they found it.
Therefore, it would be
unfair to criticise them for not having made
these disclosures under the Code as it currently stands. It also
accepts that the
declaration of invalidity should be suspended for
12 months to allow the President to remedy the defect, as he may
deem appropriate.
Amicus
Curiae: Johannesburg Society of Advocates’ submissions
[22]
In broad outline, the amicus submits
that our Constitution contains no obligation for the public
disclosure of donations made to
campaigns for election to internal
party positions. As a result, a failure to provide for such a
requirement in legislation or
subordinate legislation such as the
Code does not violate the Constitution. In analysing
section 2(2)(c), read with section
2(2)(b)(iv) of the Ethics
Act, the amicus submits that they limit the disclosure of a member of
the executive’s financial
interest. Section 2(2)(c) is
limited to donations or financial support that is for the member of
the executive’s personal
interest in line with the values of
transparency and in order to mitigate against the risk of corruption
(as contemplated in section 2(2)(b)(iv))
and members of the
executive seeking to improperly benefit their donors. This risk does
not arise in instances when the member
of the executive or their
relatives do not benefit personally. The risk of corruption only
arises when the member of the executive
is aware of the persons from
whom any donations and financial support is made to the member’s
political campaign. This can
appropriately be addressed in the Code.
The limitation that a disclosure need only be made when a member of
the executive personally
benefits from the funding of their campaign
for a political party position ensures that donors or contributors
are aware that their
financial support would not be known to the
persons they support and accordingly that they cannot ultimately
improperly benefit.
[23]
According to the amicus, a blanket
requirement of disclosure, even when a member of the executive has
prudently had their campaign
run in a manner that does not allow them
access to the information about specific donors and contributors to
the campaign, creates
an unnecessary risk of corruption because that
member would end up knowing such detail, thus defeating the very
purpose of the
Code. A blanket disclosure exposes all members,
regardless of whether they benefit personally, to a risk of
improperly benefiting
their private interests or the interests of
their donors and such exposure is not in line with section 96 of the
Constitution.
This approach also safeguards the constitutional
privacy rights of third parties who donate to campaigns in respect of
which the
member of the executive is completely unaware.
[24]
On the basis of this explication of
the Ethics Act, the amicus contends that the Code does not
breach the Ethics Act. The ambit
and purport of the disclosure
requirement in the Code falls within the context, language and
purpose of the Ethics Act,
generally, and section 2(2)(c),
read with 2(2)(b)(iv), specifically. Since the Ethics Act’s
constitutionality has
not been challenged, that brings an end to
amaBhungane’s case.
[25]
The amicus further subjects to close
scrutiny each one of the various sections of the Constitution
which amaBhungane contends
is violated by the partial disclosure
requirement under the Code (that is sections 1, 7(2), 19, 32, 96 and
195 of the Constitution),
and submits that the challenge is
devoid of merit in respect of all of them. In sum, this is because
these sections do not provide
for the constitutional obligation that
requires public disclosure of donations made in an internal party
election; and the Code
does not breach the obligations set out
in the respective sections.
[26]
The
amicus further contends that, even if a constitutional obligation
exists as postulated by amaBhungane, the constitutional challenge
against the Code is misdirected for the following reasons. First, the
attack fails on the principle of subsidiarity and, second,
the Code
is not the appropriate vehicle for giving effect to the
constitutional obligation. Furthermore, the amicus submits that
there
is no vagueness in the Code’s provisions, and that its ambit
and purport have been made clear by the judgments of this
Court and
the Full Court as far as paragraphs 5 and 6 of the Code are
concerned. Those judgments have held that the Code only applies
to
campaign donations that constitute personal benefits. In any event,
so the amicus contends, if there is a constitutional obligation
for
the disclosure of funding of an intra party campaign, the proper
vehicle for regulating such disclosure would be the Political
Party
Funding Act
[10]
(the PPFA). The enquiry would then be whether the PPFA fails to give
effect to the constitutional obligation of disclosure. But
the PPFA
is not before this Court. The amicus contends that the PPFA,
with suitable amendments, would be a more appropriate
vehicle to
cater for the regulation of disclosure as it is the legislation that
specifically regulates political party funding,
including donations.
[27]
As to vagueness, the amicus submits
that this Court has already concluded that it is not arbitrary or
irrational that there is a
distinction between donations made for a
party candidate’s personal benefit and those made for that
candidate’s campaign.
When a donation is made without
personally benefitting the candidate, and thus not creating a risk of
a conflict of interest or
of a candidate seeking to improperly
benefit the donor, it is not arbitrary for that donation to not be
disclosed. The candidate
would also not know of the donation. It is
thus not irrational that Ministers, Deputy Ministers and MECs should
not know who donates
to their campaigns. Ensuring that they are not
informed of the details and the amounts of the donations they receive
would avoid
the risk of conflict and patronage. To require disclosure
in the manner sought by amaBhungane would compel Ministers, Deputy
Ministers
and MECs to know who has supported them. It is not
arbitrary for the Code to seek to avoid this risk.
[28]
According to the amicus, the wording
of paragraphs 5 and 6 of the Code fits well with this Court’s
interpretation, as supported
by the Full Court. The wording of the
provisions properly recognises and gives effect to the purport of
section 2 of the Ethics Act.
The persons to whom the
Code applies and for whose benefit it was promulgated can reasonably
ascertain the meaning of paragraphs
5 and 6 of the Code. There
is reasonable certainty about the meaning of the Code especially in
the light of this Court’s
judgment; and it is plain when
campaign donations will be exempt from disclosure and when not. The
Code is thus written in a clear
and accessible manner and is not in
breach of the rule of law.
[29]
In respect of jurisdiction, the
amicus accepts that the matter is properly before this Court for
the confirmation of the Full
Court’s order of constitutional
invalidity. On the merits, ultimately, the amicus submits that
amaBhungane’s application
is impermissible, unwarranted and
unfounded and this Court ought to dismiss the application for
confirmation, set aside the Full
Court’s order and substitute
it with one dismissing amaBhungane’s application.
Jurisdiction
and leave to appeal
[30]
These
are proceedings for confirmation of a declaration by the High Court
that conduct of the erstwhile President is constitutionally
invalid.
The Code was published
under
Proclamation No. R41 of 2000
by
the then President in terms of section 2 of the Ethics Act.
Section 172(2)(a) of the Constitution provides that
a declaration
that conduct of the President is constitutionally invalid has no
force unless confirmed by this Court. Therefore,
as the
publication of the Code by the President is conduct of the President,
no leave to appeal is required, given the peremptory
wording of
the section. But it remains this Court’s decision whether
confirmation should follow – that is not
a mere rubberstamping,
mechanical exercise.
[11]
Evaluation
The
legislative framework
[31]
A
useful starting point is the legislation that finds application here,
commencing with the provisions of the Constitution. It is
instructive
that in respect of suffrage, section 1(d) of the Constitution
outlines as central founding values: “[u]niversal
adult
suffrage, a national common voters roll, regular elections and a
multi-party system of democratic government, to ensure
accountability,
responsiveness and openness”
.
[12]
Section 7(2) of the Constitution refers to the state’s
positive duty to “respect, protect, promote and fulfil
the
rights in the Bill of Rights”. Section 19 provides for
citizen’s political rights
.
[13]
Section 32 makes provision for the right of access to
information.
[14]
Section 96 regulates the conduct of Cabinet members and Deputy
Ministers.
[15]
Lastly, section 195 deals with public administration.
[16]
All these constitutional provisions have an important bearing on the
context and purpose of the Ethics Act and the Code.
[32]
Due to its importance, the relevant
provisions of the Ethics Act bear close scrutiny. The Ethics Act
is the legislation contemplated
in section 96(1) of
the Constitution. Section 2 reads:
“
Code
of Ethics
2(1) The
President must, after consultation with Parliament, by proclamation
in the Gazette, publish a code of
ethics prescribing standards
and rules aimed at promoting open, democratic and accountable
government and with which Cabinet members,
Deputy Ministers and MECs
must comply in performing their official responsibilities.
(2)
The code of ethics must—
(a)
include provisions requiring Cabinet members, Deputy Ministers and
MECs—
(i)
at all times to act in good faith and in the best interest of good
governance; and
(ii)
to meet all the obligations imposed on them by law; and
(b)
include provisions prohibiting Cabinet members, Deputy Ministers
and MECs from—
(i)
undertaking any other paid work;
(ii)
acting in a way that is inconsistent with their office;
(iii)
exposing themselves to any situation involving the risk of a conflict
between their official responsibilities
and their private interests;
(iv)
using their position or any information entrusted to them, to enrich
themselves or improperly benefit
any other person; and
(v)
acting in a way that may compromise the credibility or integrity of
their office or of the government.
(c)
require Cabinet members and Deputy Ministers to disclose to an
official in the office of the President
designated for this purpose,
and MECS to disclose to an official in the office of the Premier
concerned designated for this purpose—
(i)
all their financial interests when assuming office; and
(ii)
any financial interests acquired after their assumption of office,
including any gifts, sponsored
foreign travel, pensions, hospitality
and other benefits of a material nature received by them or by such
persons having a family
or other relationship with them as may be
determined in the code of ethics; and
(d)
prescribe that the financial interests to be disclosed in terms of
paragraph (c) must at least include
the information, and be under the
same conditions of public access thereto, as is required by members
of the National Assembly
as determined by that House from time to
time, but may prescribe the disclosure of additional information.
(3)
The code of ethics may prescribe any matter that may be necessary for
the effective implementation of
the code of ethics.”
[33]
The
Public Protector is empowered, in section 3 of the Ethics Act, to
investigate breaches of the Code when a complaint is made
in terms of
section 4.
[17]
When the complaint relates to a Minister, Premier or a Deputy
Minister, the Public Protector must report on her investigation to
the President and if it relates to an MEC, she must report to the
Premier concerned.
[18]
The President must submit a copy of the report on the Minister or
Deputy Minister and any comments thereon, together with a report
on
any action to be taken in regard thereto, to the National
Assembly.
[19]
The President must, after receiving a report on a Premier, submit a
copy of the report and any comments thereon to the National
Council
of Provinces.
[20]
The Premier must submit a copy of the report on an MEC and any
comments thereon, together with a report on any action taken or
to be
taken in regard thereto, to the provincial legislature.
[21]
[34]
Paragraphs 5 and 6 of the Code are
also of relevance here. Paragraph 5 reads:
“
5.1
Every member must disclose to the Secretary particulars of all the
financial interests, as set out in paragraph
6, of—
(a)
the member; and
(b)
the member’s spouse, permanent companion or dependent children,
to the extent that the member
is aware of those interests.
5.2 The
first disclosure must be made within 60 days after the promulgation
of this Code or of a member’s
assumption of office, or of
a member becoming aware of such interest, as the case may be.
5.3
After the first disclosure, members must annually disclose
particulars of their financial interests on or
before a date
determined by the Secretary.
5.4
Cabinet members and Deputy Ministers who are members of the
National Assembly and are required to disclose
particulars of
their financial interests in terms of the Rules of Parliament, comply
with paragraph 5.1—
(a)
by submitting to the Secretary a copy of those particulars on the
same date as they are filed with the
relevant parliamentary official;
and
(b)
insofar as those particulars do not meet the requirements of
paragraph 6 of this Code, by filing
with the Secretary a
statement containing the necessary additional disclosure.
5.5
Where any doubt exists as to whether particular financial interests
must be disclosed, the member must consult
the Secretary.
5.6
When a member makes a disclosure in terms of paragraph 5.1, the
member must confirm in writing to the
Secretary that the member
receives no remuneration other than as a member of the Executive.”
[35]
Paragraph 6 provides for the
disclosure of financial interests in the following terms:
“
Members
must disclose the following interests and details—
. . .
6.2
Sponsorships—
(a)
The source and description of direct financial sponsorship or
assistance from any source other than
the member’s party which
benefits the member in his or her personal and private capacity; and
(b)
the amount or value of the sponsorship or assistance.
6.3
Gifts and hospitality other than that received from a spouse or
permanent companion or family member—
A description, including
the value and source of—
(a)
any gift with a value of more than R350;
(b)
gifts received from a single source which cumulatively exceed the
value of R350 in any calendar year;
(c)
hospitality intended as a personal gift and with a value of more than
R350; and
(d)
hospitality intended as a gift and received from a single source, and
which cumulatively exceeds the
value of R350 in any calendar year.
6.4
Benefits—
(a)
The nature and source of any other benefit of a material nature; and
(b)
the value of that benefit.
. . .
6.6
Land and immovable property, including land or property outside
South Africa—
(a)
A description of and the extent of the land or property;
(b)
area in which it is situated; and
(c)
nature and value of interest in the land or property.”
[36]
As
always, in interpreting any statutory provision, one must start with
the words, affording them their ordinary meaning, bearing
in mind
that statutory provisions should always be interpreted purposively,
be properly contextualised and must be construed consistently
with
the Constitution.
[22]
This is a unitary exercise.
[23]
The context may be determined by considering other subsections,
sections or the chapter in which the keyword, provision or expression
to be interpreted is located.
[24]
Context may also be determined from the statutory instrument as a
whole. A sensible interpretation should be preferred to one that
is
absurd or leads to an unbusinesslike outcome.
[25]
[37]
The wide wording in section 2(2)(c)
of the Ethics Act is telling, but not decisive. The legislature
employs the words “all
their financial interests when assuming
office” in section 2(2)(c)(i), and “any financial
interests acquired after
their assumption of office” in section
2(2)(c)(ii), in relation to the duty upon members of the executive to
disclose. This
capacious ambit is extended further in the latter
instance, after enumerating various types of financial interest by:
first, adding
the words “and other benefits of a material
nature received”; and second, by including the receipt of such
benefits
beyond the member concerned (“or by such persons
having a family or other relationship with them as may be determined
in
the code of ethics”). This wording appears to denote an
unquestionably wide reach; and it appears to do so calculatedly.
[38]
Placed in context, the purpose of
the wide-ranging provisions of the Ethics Act is to ensure that
members of the executive do not
place themselves in compromising
positions that may impair their ability to discharge their duties
without any undue influence,
which includes the acceptance of
undisclosed financial contributions. Central to this objective is the
fight against the endemic
corruption that pervades our body politic.
For, as this Court cautioned in
My Vote
Counts II
:
“
Public-
and private-sector corruption is a matter of grave concern around the
world. And it appears that the political landscape,
and by extension
governance, has not been left untouched. . . . [C]orruption that
flows from secret private funding could otherwise
stealthily creep
into our political and governance space, toxify it and fossilise
itself to our detriment, if it has not already
done so.”
[26]
[39]
That caveat must be understood
against the backdrop of the requirement on the state, including the
President, to take reasonable
measures to combat and prevent
corruption. That requirement is imposed by section 7(2) of the
Constitution and explained in
Glenister
II
:
“
Endemic
corruption threatens the injunction that government must be
accountable,
responsive and open
;
that public administration must not only be held to account, but must
also be governed by high standards of
ethics
,
efficiency and must use public resources in an economic and effective
manner.”
[27]
(Emphasis added.)
[40]
The
constitutional requirement in section 96 for the enactment of
legislative measures to establish a code of ethics for Cabinet
members and Deputy Ministers that regulate their conduct,
assumes particular importance when considered against our country’s
international obligations. Those obligations relate to the need to
comply with Article 18 of the United Nations Convention Against
Corruption, ratified here on 22 November 2004.
[28]
In addition, the African Union Convention on Preventing and
Combatting Corruption
[29]
(AU Convention) pertinently acknowledges in its preamble that
“corruption undermines accountability and transparency
in the
management of public affairs as well as socio-economic development on
the continent”. T
he
preamble to
the
Southern African Development Community Protocol against Corruption
(SADC Corruption Protocol) refers to “
the
adverse and destabilising effects of corruption throughout the world
on the culture, economic, social and political foundations
of
society”, and recognises that “corruption undermines good
governance which includes the principles of accountability
and
transparency”.
[30]
Domestically, the preamble to the Prevention and Combating of Corrupt
Activities Act
[31]
strikingly records that corruption and related corrupt activities
undermine rights; the credibility of governments; the institutions
and values of democracy; and ethical values and morality; and
jeopardise the rule of law. They endanger the stability and security
of societies; jeopardise sustainable development; and provide a
breeding ground for organised crime. The preamble notes further
that
corruption is a transnational phenomenon that crosses national
borders and affects all societies and economies; that it is
equally
destructive within both the public and private spheres of life; and
that regional and international co-operation is essential
to prevent
and control corruption and related crimes.
[41]
In
Glenister
II,
this Court extensively explicated
on the state’s international commitments and obligations in
section 7(2) of the Constitution,
to combat and prevent corruption.
It said, albeit in the context of the need to establish an
independent anti corruption unit,
but equally relevant here:
“
The
obligations in these Conventions are clear and they are unequivocal.
They impose on the Republic the duty in international law
to create
an anti-corruption unit that has the necessary independence. That
duty exists not only in the international sphere, and
is enforceable
not only there. Our Constitution appropriates the obligation for
itself, and draws it deeply into its heart, by
requiring the State to
fulfil it in the domestic sphere. In understanding how it does so the
starting point is section 7(2), which
requires the State to respect,
protect, promote and fulfil the rights in the Bill of Rights. This
Court has held that in some circumstances
this provision imposes a
positive obligation on the State and its organs ‘to provide
appropriate protection to everyone through
laws and structures
designed to afford such protection’. Implicit in section 7(2)
is the requirement that the steps
the State takes to respect,
protect, promote and fulfil constitutional rights must be reasonable
and effective.
And since in terms of
section 8(1), the Bill of Rights ‘binds the legislature, the
executive, the judiciary and all organs
of State’, it follows
that the executive, when exercising the powers granted to it under
the Constitution, including the
power to prepare and initiate
legislation, and in some circumstances Parliament, when enacting
legislation, must give effect to
the obligations section 7(2) imposes
on the State.
Now plainly there are
many ways in which the State can fulfil its duty to take positive
measures to respect, protect, promote and
fulfil the rights in the
Bill of Rights. This Court will not be prescriptive as to what
measures the State takes, as long
as they fall within the range of
possible conduct that a reasonable decision-maker in the
circumstances may adopt. A range of possible
measures is therefore
open to the State, all of which will accord with the duty the
Constitution imposes, so long as the measures
taken are reasonable.
. . .
[C]orruption
in the polity corrodes the rights to equality, human dignity,
freedom, security of the person and various socio-economic
rights.
That corrosion necessarily triggers the duties section 7(2) imposes
on the State. We have also noted that it is open to
the state in
fulfilling those duties to choose how best to combat corruption. That
choice must withstand constitutional scrutiny.”
[32]
[42]
Concomitant with the need to enact
legislation to fight corruption, is the need to regulate the funding
of candidates and political
parties by legislative means. This is
premised on both international and domestic obligations.
Internationally, there is the obligation
imposed by Article 7(3) of
the United Nations Convention Against Corruption to enact legislative
measures for enhanced transparency
in respect of the individual
candidatures for public office and the funding of political parties.
Domestically, section 19 of the
Constitution affords citizens the
right to make political choices, including the right to vote in
elections. Those rights must
be exercised meaningfully on an informed
basis. In
My Vote Counts II
,
this Court explained:
“
By
its very nature, the proper exercise of the right to vote is largely
dependent on information. . . . There is wide coverage of
electoral
campaigns on all media platforms and they are fundamentally about
sharing information so that the electorate know more
about those
public office seekers.
That information is
generally calculated to have voters believe that the candidate it
relates to can be trusted and deserves their
support because she is
best placed to serve citizens in the public office being campaigned
for. It seeks to demonstrate their abhorrence
of corruption and all
facets of unethical conduct. It is also meant to assure the public of
their commitment to our constitutional
values and good governance.
The centrality of information to this process cannot be
over-emphasised.
This then means that
political parties and independent candidates should not be left to
pick and choose what information would be
‘held’,
preserved and disclosed to those who depend on information to
determine to whom to entrust their future, that
of the nation and
posterity. All information necessary to enlighten the electorate
about the capabilities and dependability or
otherwise of those
seeking public office must not only be compulsorily captured and
preserved but also made reasonably accessible.
The reality is that
private funders do not just thoughtlessly throw their resources
around. They do so for a reason and quite strategically.
Some pour in
their resources because the policies of a particular party or
independent candidate resonate with their world outlook
or ideology.
Others do so hoping to influence the policy direction of those they
support to advance personal or sectional interests.
Money is the tool
they use to secure special favours or selfishly manipulate those who
are required to serve and treat all citizens
equally.
Unchecked or secret
private funding from all, including other nations, could undermine
the fulfilment of constitutional obligations
by political parties or
independent candidates so funded, and by extension our nation’s
strategic objectives, sovereignty
and ability to secure a ‘rightful
place’ in the family of nations. Our freely elected
representatives must thus be
so free that they would be able to focus
and deliver on their core constitutional mandate. They cannot help
build a free society
if they are not themselves free of hidden
potential bondage or captivation.
The
commitment to build ‘a united and democratic South Africa’
and to ‘improve the quality of life of all citizens’
can
only be honoured by public office bearers whose character or
willpower is unencumbered. Only when there is a risk of being
exposed
for receiving funding from dubious characters or entities that could
influence them negatively, for the advancement of
personal or
sectoral interests, would all political parties and independent
candidates be constrained to steer clear of such funders
and be free
to honour their declared priorities and constitutional obligations.
And that risk would be enabled by a regime that
compels a disclosure
of information on the private funding of political players.”
[33]
(Footnotes omitted.)
[43]
Closely related to the rights
contained in section 19, is section 32(1)(b) of the Constitution
which provides that everyone has
the right of access to any
information “that is held by another person and that is
required for the exercise or protection
of any rights”.
Informed decisions by voters as envisaged in
My
Vote Counts II
must be based on
adequate information, including that gleaned in connection with
internal political party campaign funding. Before
undertaking closer
scrutiny of the relevant provisions of the Ethics Act and the Code to
explain this observation, it is necessary
to have regard to this
Court’s judgment in the preceding litigation, the review
judgment, as well as that of the Full Court,
pursuant to this Court’s
review judgment.
This
Court’s judgment in the review application
[44]
This
Court heard argument on two distinct issues in the main review
application.
[34]
First, it had to interpret the Code to decide the issues on review as
between the President and the Public Protector. Second, this
Court
had to consider the constitutionality of the Code, as raised by
amaBhungane. It decided the first issue in favour of the
President.
In light of its decision to remit that part of the case to the
High Court for hearing, this Court did not make
any
pronouncements on the constitutionality of the Code. That is the
issue now before us.
[45]
The
central feature of this Court’s judgment in interpreting the
Code is that not all donations made towards internal campaigns
for
election to political party positions are disclosable under the Code.
This Court held that “
[u]nder
the Code, the duty to disclose is activated once a benefit is given
to a member of Cabinet
in
his or her personal capacity
”.
[35]
This finding was repeated several times throughout the judgment.
[46]
The Court dismissed, in no uncertain
terms, the EFF’s submissions that the President could not avoid
disclosure by wilfully
remaining ignorant of donations made to the
CR17 campaign:
“
The
issue is not whether the President deliberately kept himself ignorant
of matters he was required to disclose. Instead, the question
is
whether there was proof that he personally benefited from the CR17
campaign donations. The EFF did not point to any evidence
on record
which established that the President
benefitted
in his personal capacity
because such
evidence was not placed on record. It does not exist.
Without proof of that
kind, it cannot be said that the President failed to disclose
benefits he was under a duty to disclose. It
bears emphasis that
there must first be a benefit to a member of Cabinet for him or her
to be obliged to make a disclosure in terms
of the Code. In the
absence of proof of a
personal benefit
to the President, the
High Court concluded that he did not fail to make a disclosure.
In the
entire report the Public Protector has not even once referred to any
evidence that indicates that the President
benefitted
personally
from the CR17 campaign donations. The absence of such evidence was
expressly raised in the representations made by the President
in
response to the interim report.”
[36]
(Emphasis added.)
[47]
This Court pointed out:
“
In
the final paragraph of the Public Protector’s reasoning quoted
above, she suggests that the President received donations
which he
was obliged to disclose under the Code and the [Ethics] Act.
This is a finding made without a shred of evidence supporting
it. On
the contrary, the evidence placed before the Public Protector which
is also reflected in the report, establishes that the
President did
not receive donations. Therefore, the argument advanced by the
President was in line with the evidence on record.
On the basis of
the undisputed evidence,
it was the CR17
campaign that received donations and not the President
.
It is
a leap in logic to hold that the President
personally
benefitted
from the donations made to the CR17 campaign. That campaign, on the
undisputed evidence, existed separately from the President.
And there
was no evidence that it was appointed to act as his agent. There is
therefore no basis in law to regard donations to
the CR17 campaign
as
personal
benefits
to the President.”
[37]
(Emphasis added.)
[48]
This
Court rejected “the contention that the President personally
benefitted from donations made to the CR17 campaign because
one of
the campaign’s objectives was to promote his candidacy to
becoming President of the ANC, a step towards becoming President
of
the country”, holding that “the contention rests on a
number of assumptions that are without factual and legal
foundation”.
[38]
In sum, this Court’s review judgment imposes only a
partial disclosure obligation on members of the executive. That
obligation only arises when a member derives personal benefits from
campaign donations.
[49]
To be clear, the limited disclosure
this Court referred to was based on the interpretation it was
required to give to the Code in
its current form – this Court
was not called upon to test the constitutionality of the Code at all.
This Court therefore
was not required to nor did it endorse the
acceptance of this partial disclosure.
Full
Court proceedings regarding the constitutional challenge to the Code
[50]
The Full Court identified the issues
before it as follows:
“
15.1.
According to the Constitutional Court, does the Code impose
a duty to
disclose private internal party-political funding for Members of the
Executive?
15.2. If there is a
partial duty to disclose, is amaBhungane’s constitutional
challenge triggered, or is it non-suited in
view of the nature of the
condition upon which the challenge is based?
15.3.
If amaBhungane is not non-suited, and the constitutional challenge is
properly before the High Court, is the Code, as interpreted
by the
Constitutional Court, unconstitutional?”
[39]
[51]
Broadly
speaking, amaBhungane’s constitutional challenge before the
Full Court was founded on the following central premises
emanating from the Constitution – that section 1(d) recognises
that accountability, responsiveness and openness are core
values of
our democracy. The related constitutional need for ethical government
is recognised in section 96, which requires the
adoption of a code of
ethics, and which prohibits members of the executive arm of
Government from exposing themselves to any situation
involving the
risk of a conflict between their official responsibilities and their
private interests. The disclosure of such information
facilitates
transparency and openness, and is consistent with the right of access
to information held by both public and private
persons as outlined in
section 32(1) of the Constitution. It also enhances the right to make
political choices, both for persons
involved in the internal
activities of their chosen political party and, more broadly, for all
members of the public who have the
right to participate in national
elections, which rights are guaranteed in section 19 of the
Constitution.
[40]
[52]
AmaBhungane developed its argument
before the Full Court by contending that, on this Court’s
interpretation of the Code in
the review judgment, the duty to
disclose is partial in effect, applying only to campaign donations
that constitute personal benefits.
AmaBhungane argued that a partial
disclosure obligation to this limited extent undermines the
constitutional imperatives of accountability,
openness and
transparency, in that it permits members of the executive to avoid
having to make disclosure by structuring their
campaign funding in
such a way that it falls outside the “personal benefit”
contours laid down by this Court.
[53]
The President, on the other hand,
contended that absent an unqualified finding by this Court in the
review judgment - that disclosure
of donations to campaigns for
positions within political parties are not, under any circumstances,
disclosable under the Code -
the conditionality of amaBhungane’s
counter-application was not met. Thus, the Full Court should not
consider the merits
of the constitutional challenge.
[54]
Regarding the merits, the President
contended that the standard of personal benefit adopted and applied
by this Court in the review
judgment is broad enough to meet what the
Constitution requires. According to the President, actual money
received is not necessary
to constitute a benefit for purposes of
triggering the duty to disclose. The President contended that, by and
large, most campaign
donations for internal party political
elections will be disclosable under the Code as it exists on this
basis. The vast majority
of such donations, he suggested, will fall
into the category of constituting a personal benefit for the member
concerned, and there
is no need to change the Code to deal with what
he described as “outliers”, as exemplified by the
CR17 campaign.
Implicit in this submission is the notion that
the Code in its present form is a reasonable and effective measure
for achieving
accountable, transparent and open government required
by the Constitution and to guard against the risk of corruption.
[55]
The Full Court, in considering this
Court’s review judgment, held that the judgment established
that the duty to disclose
arises when any benefit, including that
derived from campaign funding for a member’s internal
party-political campaign, is
given to her in her personal capacity.
In terms of the Full Court’s analysis of this Court’s
review judgment, it is
clear that this Court did not find that
members are under an automatic duty to disclose all internal
party-political campaign funding
linked to them. This means that
there will be instances where such funding will not give rise to a
duty to disclose. To this extent,
the question arises as to the
constitutionality of the inherent limitations of the Code and whether
the condition set by amaBhungane
for its application was satisfied.
The President’s contention to the contrary was consequently
rejected.
[56]
In a careful analysis of this
Court’s findings in its review judgment, the Full Court
explained the effect of those findings
on the Code’s meaning:
“
24.
If one turns these findings around, it seems that the
Constitutional Court recognised that benefits would be
personal
to a Member, and attract a duty to disclose under the Code where:
24.1. the benefits are
financial, rather than politically beneficial;
24.2. the benefits are
given to, or held or used by the Member directly;
24.3. alternatively, even
if not given to, or held or used directly by the Member, she or he
has control over, or a claim to the
funding;
24.4. further
alternatively, the campaign structure receiving the funding acts as
the Member’s agent.
25.
This means that financial donations to a campaign in support of a
Member’s election to a position in
his or her own party are not
per
se
disclosable under the Code. Equally, however, they are not
per
se
exempt from disclosure. If, on a consideration of factors such as
those highlighted in the Constitutional Court’s judgment,
the donations can be categorised as a personal benefit, there is a
duty on a Member to make disclosure of them under the Code.
The
reason why the CR17 donations did not attract a duty to disclose
under the Code is that, on the facts before the Court, they
lacked
the characteristics necessary to establish them as personal
benefits.”
[41]
[57]
This leads me to an assessment of
the impugned provisions and the central issue.
Is
the Code constitutional?
[58]
At the centre of the debate before
us is the meaning and effect of
section 2(2)(c)
of the Ethics Act and the obligation on members of the executive to
disclose financial interests. Section 2(2)(c)
sets out two
obligations. The first is to disclose “all their financial
interests when assuming office”; and the second
is to disclose
“any financial interests acquired after their assumption of
office”. A non-exhaustive list (denoted
by the word
“including”) then follows.
As
stated, the use of the words “all” and “any”,
and their apparent wide reach, must not be overstated as
if they
provide a final, definitive answer to the issue before us. Equally,
nothing turns on
the listing of types of
financial interest in section 2(2)(c)(ii) or differentiating the
types of financial interest that require
disclosure before and after
assuming office. That exposition simply enumerates some of the types
of interest that require disclosure
after assuming office. It does
not purport to be a closed list.
[59]
Answering the central question here
requires an interpretation of “financial interests” in
section 2(2)(c). The question
arises whether such interests include
campaign contributions made on an arms-length basis to an entity that
the office holder neither
controlled, ran nor had knowledge of the
identities of contributors. AmaBhungane says that it is wide enough;
the amicus says it
is not. In addition to those submissions, it was
questioned whether this Court has determined that question in its
review judgment.
In respect of the latter, as stated, the answer must
unequivocally be in the negative. This Court, having decided the
central issue
before it, deliberately
refrained
from making any finding at all about the constitutional validity of
the Code, mindful that this issue would still
have to be decided
by the High Court upon remittal. This Court did
not
decide what the relevant provisions of the Ethics Act mean and
whether the Code is consistent with the Ethics Act. Section
2(2)(c)(ii) of the Ethics Act must plainly be interpreted to go
further than the Code by its inclusion of the words “any
financial interest”. This aspect is fundamental to the central
question before us.
[60]
A close scrutiny of the legislation
suggests that determining
whether an office
holder has a financial interest in campaign funding raised to secure
appointment to a party office simply on the
basis of whether the
entity that raised the donations is a separate entity from the office
holder and the office holder does not
control that entity,
provides
no answer to the central question
. Drawing
an analogy with a trust – where the office holder is a
beneficiary of that trust, a financial interest on the part
of the
office holder arises, even though the trust and its assets are
entirely separate from the office holder who, as beneficiary,
exercises no control over the trust. By parity of reasoning, if
funding is raised through an entity that is separate from the office
holder but which benefits the office holder by supporting her bid for
party office, that benefit constitutes a financial interest.
This is
akin to a
stipulatio alteri
(an
agreement for the benefit of a third party). The benefit flowing from
that kind of agreement gives rise to a financial interest
that would
be subject to disclosure. This is in essence what is meant by “other
benefits of material nature received by them”.
Thus, once the
office holder had knowledge of the campaign to raise funds and was
willing to allow the entity involved to do so,
the office holder
accepted the benefits of the campaign funding and the funding then
forms part of “their financial interest”.
[61]
In the normal course of events, a
candidate running for office requires funding for her campaign. If
that campaign is launched and
run with the knowledge or blessing of
the candidate, then it can hardly be denied that she accepts the
benefit of what is done
and that she receives the benefit of the
funding for her campaign, thus a financial interest arises. It
matters not that the office
holder’s funding campaign is run
through a separate entity and is not controlled by the office holder
or that the office
holder is ignorant as to the identity of those who
have given; so long as the benefit is accepted, it is a financial
interest that
is subject to disclosure.
[62]
During the hearing, the amicus
raised the question whether third parties who raised money to promote
a candidate, without donating
to the candidate or his campaign, could
be said to give rise to a financial interest. That would be an
exceptional, borderline
case that need not be decided on the facts
before us. It is common cause that an extensive campaign was run for
the benefit of
the President to raise funding for his campaign to be
elected President of the ANC. On the common cause or uncontroverted
facts,
the campaign ran completely separately from the President, it
did not act as his agent, there was no evidence that he had himself
received any donations and he had control over the funds. These
factors weighed heavily with this Court in its ultimate finding
in the review judgment that the President did not receive a
disclosable benefit. That finding and its underlying reasoning will
be discussed presently to consider their effect on this case.
[63]
I
have alluded to the Full Court’s meticulous reasoning in its
assessment of the meaning of this Court’s primary findings
in
the review judgment. That line of reasoning and consequent findings
can hardly be faulted and are in my view unassailable. There
can be
no quarrel with its conclusion that “
financial
donations to a campaign in support of a member’s election to a
position in his or her own party are not
per
se
disclosable under the Code.
Equally,
however, they are not per se exempt from disclosure
”.
[42]
[64]
The need for transparency in
campaign donations must be understood against the backdrop of and in
the context of the pressing need
to curb and strive towards
eradicating corruption. It is necessary to return briefly to
My
Vote Counts II.
The principles
enunciated there are of importance in this case. The vital role
played by an automatic requirement for disclosure
in combatting
corruption was highlighted. This Court held that the right to
access to information, read with the entitlement
to exercise an
informed right to vote, implicitly demanded that information on the
private funding of political parties and independent
candidates be
recorded, preserved and made reasonably accessible to the public. The
Court highlighted the centrality of information
to the electoral
process and warned against political candidates being able to decide
what information should be made available
to voters.
[65]
As I read
My
Vote Counts II
, this Court plainly
established the constitutional standard of transparency, which the
Code, in my view, in its current form fails
to meet. It appears to me
that “any financial interest” must be interpreted broadly
to include all donations, not just
those giving rise to a personal
benefit. The requirement in section 39(2) of the Constitution
that “[w]hen interpreting
any legislation, and when developing
the common law or customary law, every court, tribunal or forum must
promote the spirit, purport
and objects of the Bill of Rights”
must lead to this conclusion. In light of section 39(2) of the
Constitution, sections
1(d), 7(2), 19, 32, 96 and 195 of the
Constitution must, therefore, be relevant when interpreting
section 2(2)(c)(ii) of the
Ethics Act. To interpret the
Ethics Act narrowly in the way advocated by the amicus, would go
against constitutional imperatives
and undermine transparency. The
Ethics Act ought to be interpreted purposively. The amicus
conceded that transparency was
frustrated by the Code. The amicus
also accepted that the Code would be constitutionally deficient if
“any financial interest”
were not to be interpreted
broadly by this Court as submitted by amaBhungane.
[66]
The partial disclosure obligation
imposed by this Court’s review judgment on the basis of the
Code as it stands, is clearly
insufficient to meet the relevant
constitutional and statutory obligations. It permits Ministers and
MECs to avoid having to make
disclosure by structuring their campaign
funding in such a way that it falls outside the “personal
benefit” requirement
outlined by this Court. On that approach,
the disclosure obligation can be easily evaded by the member of the
executive through
the setting up of a separate legal entity to
collect donations to support her campaign, and by an arms-length
relationship with
that entity by ensuring that she exercises no
control over the funds and does not receive it directly. This would
plainly undermine
the constitutional and statutory obligations
outlined. The amicus’ contention that the ambit and purport of
the disclosure
requirement in the Code falls within the context,
language and purpose of the Ethics Act, generally, and section
2(2)(c), read
with section 2(2)(b)(iv), specifically and that
the Code does not breach the Ethics Act, cannot be sustained.
Furthermore,
its submission that there is no constitutional
obligation for public disclosure of donations made to campaigns for
election to
internal party positions and that, as a result of a
failure to provide for such a requirement in legislation or
subordinate legislation
such as the Code is not a violation of the
Constitution, also falls to be dismissed.
[67]
Ultimately, the question is about
the source of the money and the party who benefits, personally or
otherwise. The structures through
which the money flows and the walls
that may be erected hardly matter. In the fight against corruption it
is the connection between
the source and the beneficiary that matters
and the optics are just as important.
[68]
In
My
Vote Counts II,
this Court pointed out:
“
The
loophole or leeway ‘not to hold’ or not to preserve
information, and the consequential non-disclosure of information
relating to private funding or quantifiable support in kind,
constitutes fertile ground for undermining or even subverting the
real ‘will of the people’ that is expressible through
voting.”
[43]
[69]
This is precisely the effect that
the shortcomings of a partial disclosure obligation would have.
[70]
In summary – the Code falls short of
constitutional and statutory dictates of transparency, accountability
and openness. T
he exclusion from disclosure of donations for
internal party elections undermines the Ethics Act and the conflict
of interest regime
that is essential to promote transparency and to
deal with the pervasive corruption bedevilling us.
Other
issues
[71]
AmaBhungane
raises the question of the Code’s impreciseness on disclosure.
The amicus, in turn, raises
issues
of
subsidiarity,
separation of powers, and recourse to the PPFA instead of a challenge
to the Code. In view of the conclusion reached
on the
constitutionality of the Code, these issues need not be considered.
But there is one last important aspect on the merits
that does bear
consideration. That is the question whether this Court’s review
judgment
has
already interpreted the Code, in particular whether it has
interpreted clause 6.4 and the reference there to “any other
benefit
of a material nature
”,
[44]
to mean that a duty to disclose only arises when a personal benefit
is received. Can it be said that “benefit of a material
nature”
in clause 6.4 of the Code is broader than “any financial
interest” in section 2(2)(c)(ii) of the Ethics
Act?
[72]
The essence of this enquiry is whether these are two
pieces of legislation with substantially similar wording, which leads
to the
question whether the outcome here is reconcilable with that in
the review judgment. Put differently: does the latter judgment
constrain
our
assessment of the meaning of clause
6.4? I think not. The earlier case that culminated in the review
judgment and this case are
different. There is thus no danger here of
interpreting like cases differently. I disagree with any suggestion
that “benefit
of a material nature” in clause 6.4 of the
Code is broader than “any financial interest” in section
2(2)(c)(ii)
of the Ethics Act. The term “any financial
interest” is broad and unqualified. However, a “benefit
of a material
nature” needs to be a personal benefit in order
for a duty to disclose to arise, as determined in the review
judgment. Furthermore,
and of some significance, “any financial
interest” in section 2(2)(c)(ii) of the Ethics Act includes
“other benefits
of a material nature” within its ambit,
which implies that “any financial interest” is a broader
concept than
“benefit of a material nature”.
[73]
There is, in my view, no difficulty
in interpreting “any financial interest” to be broader
than “benefit of a
material nature” and, as such, the
interpretation in the review judgment does not constrain us
here. There is no inconsistency
between these two outcomes. They
decide different issues in two differently worded pieces of
legislation with different meanings
and purview. The CR17 campaign is
a good example. It can hardly be described as a “benefit of a
material nature”, given
the manner in which it was structured.
Great care was taken in setting the campaign up as a separate entity
to collect donations
to support the President’s campaign and to
ensure that he exercised no control at all over the funds, or to have
the funds
channelled to him directly. The President had no say and no
knowledge at all over who donated what to the campaign and how the
monies raised were to be spent. That much is clear from this Court’s
review judgment and those findings have not been assailed
before us.
But the funds raised through the CR17 campaign undoubtedly fall
within the broad concept of “any financial interest”
in
the Ethics Act.
Remedy
[74]
This Court is duty bound by section
172(1)(a) of the Constitution to declare any law or conduct
unconstitutional and invalid to
the extent of its inconsistency. In
light of the reasons given and conclusions reached, we are thus
required to confirm the declaration
of constitutional invalidity to
the extent that the Code fails to require the disclosure of all
donations made to campaigns for
positions within political parties.
In addition, as amaBhungane correctly submits, the interests of
fairness and certainty require
that we do so prospectively. This
declaration of invalidity should be suspended for a period of 12
months to afford the President
time to remedy the defect. The
President is best placed to decide how these corrective amendments
should be effected, in accordance
with the separation of powers
principle. Costs should follow the outcome. Although the President
did not oppose this confirmation
application, and sought in
correspondence to this Court to avoid a costs order on this
particular basis, this Court has held to
the contrary in
Levenstein
:
“
It
is the norm to award costs in favour of a successful applicant for a
confirmation and there is no reason why this principle should
not
apply in this matter. The fact that the Minister has not opposed the
confirmation proceedings does not in itself provide a
sufficient
basis for this Court to deviate from this principle. In the
circumstances the Minister should pay the costs of the confirmation
proceedings.”
[45]
Order
[75]
The following order is made:
1.
The order of the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng Division,
Pretoria, declaring the Executive
Ethics Code published
under
Proclamation No. R41 of 2000,
to be
inconsistent with the Constitution and invalid to the extent that it
does not require the disclosure of donations made to
campaigns for
positions within political parties, is confirmed.
2.
The operation of the order is suspended for a period of 12 months
to enable the respondent
to remedy the defect.
3.
The respondent must pay the applicant’s costs, including costs
of two counsel, in this
Court.
For
the Applicant:
S Budlender SC and T Ramogale instructed by
Webber Wentzel
For the Amicus
Curiae: A
Hassim SC, M Salukazana and S Wilson instructed
by the
Johannesburg Society of Advocates
[1]
Section
96(1) deals with the conduct of Cabinet members and Deputy
Ministers. It states that “[m]embers of the Cabinet and
Deputy
Ministers must act in accordance with a code of ethics prescribed by
national legislation.”
[2]
71
of 2008.
[3]
President
of the Republic of South Africa v Public Protector
2020
(5) BCLR 513
(GP) (High Court judgment).
[4]
Public
Protector v President of the Republic of South Africa
[2021]
ZACC 19
;
2021 (6) SA 37
(CC);
2021 (9) BCLR 929
(CC) (review
judgment).
[5]
AmaBhungane
Centre for Investigative Journalism NPC v President of the Republic
of South Africa
[2022] 1 All SA 706
(GP) (Full Court judgment).
[6]
82
of 1998.
[7]
South
Africa ratified the United Nations Convention Against Corruption on
22 November 2004. Article 18 of that Convention
provides:
“
Each
State Party shall consider adopting such legislative and other
measures as may be necessary to establish as criminal offences,
when
committed intentionally:
(a)
The promise, offering or giving to a public official or any other
person, directly
or indirectly, of an undue advantage in order that
the public official or the person abuse his or her real or supposed
influence
with a view to obtaining from an administration or public
authority of the State Party an undue advantage for the original
instigator
of the act or for any other person;
(b)
The solicitation or acceptance by a public official or any other
person, directly
or indirectly, of an undue advantage for himself or
herself or for another person in order that the public official or
the person
abuse his or her real or supposed influence with a view
to obtaining from an administration or public authority of the State
Party an undue advantage.”
[8]
Article
7(3) of the Convention requires states to—
“
consider
taking appropriate legislative and administrative measures,
consistent with the objectives of this Convention and in
accordance
with the fundamental principles of its domestic law, to enhance
transparency in the funding of candidatures for elected
public
office and, where applicable, the funding of political parties.”
[9]
My
Vote Counts NPC v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services
[2018]
ZACC 17; 2018 (5) SA 380 (CC); 2018 (8) BCLR 893 (CC).
[10]
6
of 2018.
[11]
In
Phillips
v Director of Public Prosecutions, Witwatersrand Local Division
[2003] ZACC 1
;
2003 (3) SA 345
(CC)
[2003] ZACC 1
; ;
2003 (4) BCLR 357
(CC) at
para 8, this Court held:
“
Section
172(2) confirmation proceedings are not routine, for it does not
follow that High Court findings of constitutional
invalidity
will be confirmed as a matter of course. This Court is
empowered to confirm the High Court order of constitutional
invalidity only if it is satisfied that the provision is
inconsistent with the Constitution. If not, there is no alternative
but to decline to confirm the order. It follows that a finding of
constitutional invalidity by a High Court does not relieve
this
Court of the duty to evaluate the provision of the provincial Act or
Act of Parliament in the light of the Constitution.
A thorough
investigation of the constitutional status of a legislative
provision is obligatory in confirmation proceedings. This
is so even
if the proceedings are not opposed, or even if there is an outright
concession that the section under attack is invalid.”
[12]
Emphasis
added.
[13]
Section
19 provides:
“
(1)
Every citizen is free to make political choices, which includes the
right—
(a)
to form a political party;
(b)
to participate in the activities of, or recruit members for, a
political party;
and
(c)
to campaign for a political party or cause.
(2)
Every citizen has the right to free, fair and regular elections for
any legislative
body established in terms of the Constitution.
(3)
Every adult citizen has the right—
(a)
to vote in elections for any legislative body established in terms
of the Constitution,
and to do so in secret; and
(b)
to stand for public office and, if elected, to hold office.”
[14]
Section
32 reads:
“
(1)
Everyone has the right of access to—
(a)
any information held by the state; and
(b)
any information that is held by another person and that is required
for the exercise
or protection of any rights.
(2)
National legislation must be enacted to give effect to this right,
and may provide
for reasonable measures to alleviate the
administrative and financial burden on the state.”
[15]
Section
96 provides:
“
(1)
Members of the Cabinet and Deputy Ministers must act in accordance
with a code of ethics
prescribed by national legislation.
(2)
Members of the Cabinet and Deputy Ministers may not—
(a)
undertake any other paid work;
(b)
act in any way that is inconsistent with their office, or expose
themselves to any
situation involving the risk of a conflict between
their official responsibilities and private interests; or
(c)
use their position or any information entrusted to them, to enrich
themselves or
improperly benefit any other person.”
[16]
Section
195(1) and (2) read:
“
(1)
Public administration must be governed by the democratic values and
principles enshrined
in the Constitution, including the following
principles:
(a)
A high standard of professional ethics must be promoted and
maintained.
(b)
Efficient, economic and effective use of resources must be promoted.
(c)
Public administration must be development-oriented.
(d)
Services must be provided impartially, fairly, equitably and without
bias.
(e)
People’s needs must be responded to, and the public must be
encouraged to
participate in policy-making.
(f)
Public administration must be accountable.
(g)
Transparency must be fostered by providing the public with timely,
accessible and
accurate information.
(h)
Good human-resource management and career-development practices, to
maximise human
potential, must be cultivated.
(i)
Public administration must be broadly representative of the
South African
people, with employment and personnel management
practices based on ability, objectivity, fairness, and the need to
redress the
imbalances of the past to achieve broad representation.
(2)
The above principles apply to—
(a)
administration in every sphere of government;
(b)
organs of state; and
(c)
public enterprises.”
[17]
Section
3(1) of the Ethics Act.
[18]
Section
3(2)(a) and (b) of the Ethics Act.
[19]
Section
3(5)(a) of the Ethics Act.
[20]
Section
3(5)(b) of the Ethics Act.
[21]
Section
3(6) of the Ethics Act.
[22]
Cool
Ideas 1186 CC v Hubbard
[2014]
ZACC 16
;
2014 (4) SA 474
(CC);
2014 (8) BCLR 869
(CC) at para
28.
[23]
Chisuse
v Director-General, Department of Home Affairs
[2020]
ZACC 20
;
2020
(6) SA 14
(CC);
2020
(10) BCLR 1173
(CC) at para 52.
[24]
AfriForum
v University of the Free State
[2017]
ZACC 48
;
2018 (2) SA 185
(CC);
2018 (4) BCLR 387
(CC) at para 43.
[25]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012] ZASCA 13
;
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) at para18, cited with
approval in, amongst others,
University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary
[2021] ZACC 13
;
2021 (6) SA 1
(CC);
2021 (8) BCLR 807
(CC) at para
64.
[26]
My
Vote Counts II
above n 9
at
para 4.
[27]
Glenister
v President of the Republic of South Africa
[2011]
ZACC 6
;
2011 (3) SA 347
(CC);
2011 (7) BCLR 651
(CC) at para 176.
[28]
Above
n 8.
[29]
The
AU Convention was adopted on 11 July 2003. South Africa signed the
Convention on 16 March 2004, ratified the Convention on
11 November
2005 and it entered into force on 5 August 2006.
[30]
The
SADC Corruption Protocol was signed by the Heads of State of all 14
SADC member states on 14 August 2001. South
Africa
ratified the Protocol on 15 May 2003 and it entered into force on 6
July 2005.
[31]
12
of 2004.
[32]
Glenister
II
above n 27
at
paras 189-191 and para 200.
[33]
My
Vote Counts II
above n 9
at
paras 37-42.
[34]
Review
judgment
above
n 4 (emphasis added).
[35]
Id
at para 80.
[36]
Id
at paras 81-83.
[37]
Id
at paras 87-88.
[38]
Id
at para 90.
[39]
Id
at para 15.
[40]
Full
Court judgment above n 5 at para 30.
[41]
Full
Court judgment above n 5 at paras 24-25.
[42]
Full
Court judgment above n 5 at para 25 (emphasis added).
[43]
My
Vote Counts II
above n 9 at para 47.
[44]
Emphasis
added.
[45]
Levenstein
v Estate of the Late Sidney Lewis Frankel
[2018]
ZACC 16
;
2018 (8) BCLR 921
(CC);
2018 (2) SACR 283
(CC) at para 79.
sino noindex
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