Friday saw three former leaders unite in an attempt to preserve South Africa’s democratic integrity… Julius was having none of it.
Juju is very much on that beat…
On Wednesday 26 April Julius vs the ANC broadcast South Africa’s political turmoil to more than 310 million households in over 100 countries, here’s the full interview with Al Jazeera.
Trade union Solidarity has lashed out at what it sees as ‘biased media coverage’ when reporting on racial issues: Hold on tight guys, 2017 has another ‘fake news’ complaint…
On 26 April 2017, Julius vs the ANC will broadcast South Africa’s political turmoil to more than 310 million households in over 100 countries.
South Africa’s opposition parties put their differences aside and zoned in on Jacob Zuma, but it was Julius Malema who stole the show.
The political leaders heading up the #OppositionMarch on April 12 have made one thing very clear, they won’t tolerate any interruptions from camp Zuma.
Leaders of SA’s major opposition parties on Monday committed themselves to continued mass action against the current ANC regime and they all seemed to be on the same, optimistic page.
EFF leader Julius Malema isn’t pulling any punches and has been at the forefront of the opposition’s renewed drive to have Zuma kicked out of the presidency.
The EFF said it will release the report on its website.
The Western Cape Premier is not happy with the level of public outcry over her tweets.
Mpumalanga premier David Mabuza has been given quite the wake-up call after saying he would like EFF leader Julius Malema to rejoin the fold.
There is never a dull moment in SA politics…
From Fikile Mbalula’s alternative treatment for constipation to Julius Malema ‘s support for legalising weed, South Africa’s politicians don’t mince their words.
Juju explains the ‘trauma’ behind Die Stem and why it doesn’t deserve to be part of South Africa’s national anthem.
While only considering it as a last resort, Malema’s red berets aren’t ruling out resigning from parly to break the quorum and force an early general election.
South Africa’s social compact is at breaking point and the country may need a dialogue similar to its 1994 political transition talks to get out of the crisis.
This “boerseun” is happy for it to come down to a fight.
The red berets have had just about enough, and are taking legal action against the speaker of parliament over her unwillingness to act against the president.
There was a whole host of zero chill things being said. These are some of the best
Before the speech, there was all of this…
Away from the pomp of the red carpet, the DA brought black flags with “Remember the Esidimeni 94” written on them.