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Super President: The History and Future of Executive Power in South Africa

This book begins with a simple observation: none of South Africa’s presidents since Nelson Mandela have held any ministerial portfolios. This is in contrast to the nine men who ruled the country during its Union and Apartheid eras (1910-1994), from Louis Botha to F.W. de Klerk. They had all had previously served in cabinet, in as many as 6 portfolios each, sometimes with more than one ministry under their control. Crucially, many often took up ministerial positions during their own premierships and presidencies, thereby leading from the front. This is the key difference in state performance between the pre-democratic and democratic periods, the book argues. It explains the shortcomings of the post-1994 order, despite the evident potential, legitimacy and aspirations attached to it. 

In this book, Ndzendze systematically argues and empirically demonstrates that the only method to close this gap is by (re)initiating double roles for sitting presidents in all future administrations: those who head the cabinet should be both ministers and presidents at the same time. This would be constitutional, feasible and guarantee transparency towards presidential performance.

Bhaso Ndzendze is Associate Professor of Politics and International Relations at the University of Johannesburg. He is also Vice-Dean in the Faculty of Humanities, and was previously Head of Department for Politics and International Relations at the same institution. His NRF-rated research focus area is sovereignty, and has seen scientific publications on executive power, territorial disputes, interstate wars, military technology and international trade. He holds a PhD in International Relations from the University of the Witwatersrand and a postgraduate diploma in Law from the University of Johannesburg. Ndzendze is also a member of the Council for the Advancement of the South African Constitution and has a regular column in the Daily Maverick.

Authors:
Bhaso Ndzendze
University of Johannesburg
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4825-0837

Product details

Chapters

  • Introduction
    Why are there Presidents?
  • 1. President Mandela
    Learning by (Un)doing
  • 2. From Executive Deputy to Executive Head
    Thabo Mbeki’s Seamless Transition
  • 3. The Rise of the Political Presidency
    From Motlanthe to Zuma
  • 4. Ramaphosa, Cabinet Government, and the Personal Presidency
  • 5. Why are there Ministers and Deputy Presidents?
  • 6. First Ministers
    Louis Botha, Jan Smuts and Barry Hertzog
  • 7. Apartheid’s Leading Men
  • 8. A Global Benchmark of Dual Executive Power
  • 9. The American Way
    Lessons from the First Presidency
  • 10. Permissive Constitution
  • 11. Emperor at Home, King Abroad

References

Published
October 21, 2024

Details about the available publication format: PDF

PDF
ISBN-13 (15)
9781776490028
Date of first publication (11)
2024-10-15

Details about the available publication format: EPUB

EPUB
ISBN-13 (15)
9781776490035
Date of first publication (11)
2024-10-15

Details about the available publication format: XML

XML
ISBN-13 (15)
9781776490042
Date of first publication (11)
2024-10-15

Details about the available publication format: Paperback

Paperback
ISBN-13 (15)
9781776490011
Date of first publication (11)
2024-10-15
Physical Dimensions
152.4mm x 228.6mm x 13.22mm

How to Cite

Ndzendze, B. (2024). Super President: The History and Future of Executive Power in South Africa. UJ Press. https://doi.org/10.36615/9781776490028