Zuko Komisa

ActionSA has asked the Independent Electoral Commission of South Africa (IEC) to examine the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) and the uMkhonto weSizwe Party (MKP), stating that the parties’ recent political party financial reports do not support their election campaigns.
Point of View with Phemelo Motene spoke to Phemelo to ActionSA Parliamentary Chief Whip, Lerato Ngobeni who explained why ActionSA contends that the IEC cannot wait for a party to self-incriminate before its legal obligations in terms of the Act kick in.
Listen to the full conversation here:
In its first report following the May elections, the IEC detailed political party funding, revealing that between April and June, parties disclosed about R200 million in donations, the highest recorded since the Political Party Funding Act went into effect in 2021.
Ngobeni explained how in the case of the EFF, R3.5 million has been declared since the beginning of the fiscal year 2022/2023, during an election in which the party is projected to have spent more than R100 million on stadium events alone.
Furthermore, he explained how it did not make sense that the MK Party, which, since its registration, has managed disclosures of less than R400 000 which included suspicion of foreign sponsorship.
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