ANC gets Morkel majority
2007-09-12 18:38
Cape Town - Thanks to floor-crossing, the African National Congress has at last secured a clear two-thirds majority in the Morkel family.
The decisive moment came on Wednesday when the last of the Morkel brothers, Craig, joined the party.
But the patriarch, former Western Cape premier Gerald Morkel, says he had no intention of following in his sons' footsteps.
"Absolutely not," he said. "The status quo with me remains. I am a founder member of the Democratic Alliance, and for the rest of my political career I intend staying there."
Politics had long been a family affair in the Morkel clan, and over the years had become increasingly complex.
Gerald's entry into politics was as a worker for an independent candidate in the apartheid-era Coloured Representative Council.
Defected to NP
When the tricameral Parliament was created in 1984, he was elected on a Labour Party ticket to the coloureds-only House of Representatives.
Along with a number of his colleagues, he defected to the National Party in the run-up to the 1994 general elections.
In 1998 he was chosen as the NP's Western Cape leader, and took office as provincial premier.
The NP, reinvented as the New National Party, joined the Democratic Party to form the Democratic Alliance, and Gerald followed suit, staying loyal to the DA when in 2001 the NNP leadership pulled out of the arrangement and threw in its lot with the African National Congress instead.
"It was a matter of principle that I didn't go to the ANC," he said.
He served a term as DA provincial leader and as Cape Town mayor - a period marked by controversy over his links to fraudster Jurgen Harksen - and was now a councillor representing the Steenberg area.
'My political home'
The oldest of Gerald's sons, Garth, who works for the Western Cape department of social services, had according to his father "always" been a member of the ANC.
Kent, the middle son, followed his father's party trail first as a member of the LP, then through election to the Cape Town city council in 1996 on an NNP ticket.
He too stayed with the DA after the bust-up, rising to the rank of its Western Cape chairman.
But he announced last week that he was crossing the floor to the ANC.
The youngest son Craig, who came to Parliament in 1999 for the New National Party, also threw in his lot with the DA.
However in the face of suspension from the party over his involvement in the parliamentary travel voucher fraud affair, he took advantage of the 2005 floor-crossing window to form the Progressive Independent Movement.
Discuss sport
He said then he hoped after the leadership of the DA had changed to "go back to my political home".
Gerald said his sons had always had a "free rein" to decide what party they wanted to belong to.
"Never once were they asked to join the party I was in," he said.
In fact, he added, he had advised them not to enter politics.
"But I suppose the political bug bites in a family like ours. Even my grandfather was involved in politics in the old days, in Beaufort West. I suppose it runs in the blood."
He said the political rivalries never spilled over into the family's regular get-togethers.
"At home it's very pleasant," he said. "We will rag each other with 'what did the ANC say today, what did the DA say today?', but nothing serious, because my wife doesn't allow it.
"The big thing we discuss is sport. Half the family are Liverpool supporters, and the other half Manchester United supporters. It's a very big rivalry."
- SAPA