ID FINAL ELECTION RALLY SPEECH
19 APRIL 2009- Good morning, goeie more, molweni, dumela, sanibonani,
PATRICIA DE LILLE, MP
PRESIDENT OF THE INDEPENDENT DEMOCRATS
Good morning, goeie more, molweni, dumela, sanibonani,
ID leaders, branches and structures, ID members and supporters, and
fellow South Africans.
Welcome to the Final Election Rally of the Independent Democrats and
thank you all for being here today.
Over the past 3 months the leadership of the Independent Democrats,
supported by our structures and our national membership of 360 000, has
embarked on a journey around our great country. We have visited all 9
provinces.
Because our support base is so diverse, we have visited black, white,
coloured and Indian communities and have spoken to South Africans in
all our wonderful languages. We have spoken to the young, the old, the
rich and the poor about the challenges you face.
But we did not visit all of you sitting here today and watching on TV
only so that we could talk to you.
We also visited your provinces and cities, towns and communities so
that we could listen to what you had to say. Because you know the
challenges you face better than anyone else.
A number of issues arose repeatedly during the ID’s visits to your
communities across the country.
Again and again we were told stories of how poverty and unemployment,
poor service delivery and education, crime and corruption have thrown
millions of our people into a daily struggle for survival. These
challenges have stripped too many of us of our dignity and are often
the result of poor governance and incompetent, or greedy leaders. They
are also proof that most of our people have yet to taste the fruits of
our democracy.
In the Eastern Cape it took us 1 hour to cover the 10 kilometres of
road that had huge potholes and even ditches, to reach the village of
Nyandeni. We stopped to help an ID member after one of the ditches
broke the chassis of his car. The road was so bad that the SABC got
completely lost.
When we arrived over 300 people were waiting patiently for us in the
village, with men sitting next to the kraal and women on the other
side. We were welcomed by a group of dancing young girls. When we asked
about the road, we were told that no ambulances could get through to
the village and that when someone fell ill they had to walk over those
ditches themselves to get to the main road. But the biggest issues for
everyone were the lack of services that affected the children - the
dilapidated school, and the lack of clean drinking water, which results
in children falling sick.
In Galeshewe, outside Kimberley, a man in a wheelchair told me he had
been sent home from a place for the disabled with a promise that
home-based care would regularly send people to his home to wash him.
But they never arrived. This man, in his early 30s, was covered in bed
sores and his family never had the medical expertise to treat his
condition. In Limpopo, in a village outside Phalaborwa, there was no
water, while another village in Limpopo – Strydom Tunnel – also had no
clean water, in spite of the fact that a big river runs past it.
Residents in Madibeng, in North West province told us how their pride
suffered blow after blow because of livestock theft, but police hardly
ever investigate. Mama Patricia Mogale, a resident of South Soshanguve
near Pretoria, showed us a water bill from the council for R21 000, but
there wasn’t even a water metre on her plot.
In Winterveld, in North West Province, Joe Baloyi complained to us
that only ANC members get government tenders.
Meanwhile, residents of Delft, here in Cape Town, have told us how
drugs are tearing their community and families apart and causing
destructive social problems.
Some problems were common to people across the country, like those
that complained of a lack of housing.
The Independent Democrats would fix and transfer the thousands of
houses in our country that have been rented by people for 20 to 30
years.
I wish there were elections every week because there was definitely an
increase in service delivery in the weeks running up to the vote. For
the first time in years you could see people cleaning the streets and
delivering water to communities that were almost always without
it.
Others stories that were also extremely worrying were those that
involved political parties that often talk about how they want to
create jobs and alleviate poverty, but have shown that they have no
respect for the poor. The ID was also affected by the ruling party’s
intimidation tactics when the lights were turned off in the town of
Warrenton, in the Northern Cape, just 30 minutes before I was due to
speak. But the electricity cut had the opposite effect as hundreds of
residents left the darkness of their homes and joined the hundreds
already waiting to hear the ID speak about our Solutions.
Many, many people all over the country have told us that the ANC has
handed out taxpayer-funded food parcels in exchange for votes and to
lure poor South Africans to their rallies. In the Western Cape we have
also heard stories of the DA handing out food parcels in Zoar. Others
have told us that local ANC leaders have made threats that if they do
not vote for the ANC they will lose their social grants and
pensions.
These are intimidation tactics of the worst kind and show complete
contempt for the poor. I would like to say to all that have been
victims of these threats - do not allow yourself to be bullied. No
matter who you vote for you will continue to receive your pensions and
grants – and if you do not then you can tell me!
I would also like to make a final appeal to leaders of all political
parties to behave in a way that will ensure free and fair elections and
to preach and teach tolerance to their supporters.
There were also many funny and positive stories.
Oom Joop, who is 77-years old and lives in Pretoria, sent us an email
saying that I should challenge Jacob Zuma to take a lie detector
test.
Some of you spoke about the hope you have for our country and how you
want to help the ID fight for rights and offer Solutions to the
challenges we face. Still more of you have told us that rather than sit
around and complain, you have decided to be a part of the
Solution.
On our travels over the past 3 months since our Election Manifesto
Launch on 1 February, we have been spreading our positive and
empowering message. Unlike some other parties, we have not played on
people’s fears and the divides that have been created among us. Instead
we have offered well thought out Solutions and the belief that things
can get better if all of us contribute to making a difference.
Judging by the response to the Independent Democrats on the ground and
our growth in membership, we are expecting a significant increase in
support. We have also found that South Africans are growing tired of
negative campaigning and are starting to want to be a part of the
Solution. By now I am sure that all of you have heard all sorts of
promises. During elections many parties come up with promises that they
cannot deliver on. Some make the same promises that they have been
making for 15 years. While others think you are on a game show or
buying a lottery ticket by telling you that if you vote for them you
will `win’. Others may have told you that the best person to reduce
crime and corruption is a crook that understands other crooks.
The Independent Democrats has not made any empty promises. Instead, we
have offered real, practical Solutions. We have costed all of our
Solutions so that implementation is realistic. Another difference
between us and other parties is that we have been innovative. Our
Manifesto was described by the Sunday Times as comprehensive and Die
Burger as “exceptionally good”. South Africans have responded
overwhelmingly to our Solutions.
Many of our people that live in grinding poverty and do not receive
any social assistance from the Government have responded well to the
first of our “Top Ten Solutions”, which is to introduce a Minimum
Income Grant.
With the global economic meltdown, which is being felt most by the
poor, the Minimum Income Grant will bring immediate relief.
Those that have all but given up their years-long search for work have
taken note of another of our “Top Ten Solutions”, which is to position
South Africa as a world leader in renewable energy and create hundreds
of thousands of jobs over the next two decades.
They have sat up and listened when we have spoken about how we will
use the sun and the wind to power our nation, while at the same time
contributing to the international effort to slow down climate change.
It is unbelievable that we are not using the natural resources we are
blessed with. We could be world leaders in this field – all we need is
the political will to do so.
The unemployed have agreed that the ruling party cannot be serious
about job creation when there are hundreds of thousands of vacancies in
the public sector. They have agreed with us that filling these
vacancies will also speed up service delivery. Our Solution to provide
all schools with electricity, water and sanitation in 2 years and a
science laboratory, library and free Internet in 5 years has also been
popular because you all know how important education is for the future
of our children and our nation.
Our commitment to take on the root causes of crime by deploying
thousands of social workers to violence-prone communities and schools
across the country has also been met with great approval. We know that
we need more police, more resources and tougher bail laws, but we also
have to get to the root of the problem. We must fix our communities so
that young people do not turn to crime. We must heal the wounds that
cause the social problems. We must get to the bottom of alcohol and
drug abuse, violence against women and children and violent crime. We
cannot continue like this!
There is also massive support for our stance on corruption, where we
say leaders must lead by example and with integrity and honesty.
We are saying that we must put criminals in jail! Not in
government!
Sit die skelms in die tronk! Nie in regering nie!
We will continue to fight for a society that is guided by the morals
and vision we fought for in the struggle and which are contained in our
Constitution.
Not only do we have a plan, we also have the political will to
implement it.
When it comes to service delivery, the Independent Democrats has come
into this election with a proven track record. Where we govern in 26
Municipalities across the country, we have received acknowledgements
for our performance.
• In the Matzikama region we received a best-run Municipality
award.
• In the West Coast District we were awarded for being the best run
District Municipality in the entire Western Cape.
• In ID’s Witzenberg Housing Portfolio also won an award for excellent
delivery.
Under the ID the Swellendam government received an unqualified report
for the first time since the municipal government elections in 1996. In
the City of Cape Town, where we are in a coalition government, we
always fight for the rights of the poor. For example, we opposed the
budget in the City of Cape Town until the DA put in safeguards for the
poor and ordinary Capetonians.
Our work at the Parliamentary level, where we have held Government to
account, is also well-documented.
We have submitted a Private Members Bill with the goal of holding
company directors criminally liable for stealing from the poor through
price fixing. And we are the only party that has brought a motion to
regulate political party funding, because we believe that without
knowing who gives money to political parties, we can never free our
society from corruption.
We have taken Government Ministers to court when they have failed to
uphold the Constitutional rights of our people – and many times we have
won!
And of course there is the Arms Deal corruption, which you have seen
the ID fighting against over the past few years. I blew the whistle on
Arms Deal corruption on 9 September 1999 and the ID continued to expose
more and more corruption in the Deal. We have also laid a charge
against the previous Minister of Justice for interfering with the
independence of the NPA and we have begun a private prosecution against
23 other people that received discounted cars through the Arms Deal. As
they say in Cape Town: ons skrik vir niks!
To those of you who call us and write to us, I want to say thank you.
You are already a part of the Solution.
After you have voted on 22 April, you must continue to hold
politicians to account for the next 5 years. Your vote is not a blank
cheque for them to do with what they please.
There are many other ways to be a part of the Solution. Get involved
in your communities, in community organisations, community policing
forums and religious organisations. Sign the ID’s crime and corruption
pledge and report crime and corruption. We will need your patriotism
and your commitment to build a great South Africa.
To the undecided voters out there today I want to say that while as a
nation we face many problems, you must not lose hope. Every vote counts
and you can make a difference. You have a choice: to do nothing, to
just complain, or to be a part of the Solution. Unlike what some
leaders have told you, there is no such thing as a wasted vote because
we have a `proportional representation’ system, which means that every
vote counts. A vote for the ID will also not split the opposition.
On the contrary, when you vote for the ID you will be strengthening the
opposition, because a vote for the ID will increase our representation
in Parliament, adding to our strong and principled voice of fighting
for your rights and offering Solutions. So we invite you to be a part
of the Solution. And Vote ID.
Thank you, dankie, Ke a leboga, siyabonga, Enkosi.
For media enquiries, please call Steven Otter, ID National
Media Officer, on 084 233 3811

