First Cabinet of Thabo Mbeki explained

Cabinet Name:First Mbeki Cabinet
Cabinet Number:2nd
Jurisdiction:the Republic of South Africa
(since the 1994 elections)
Flag:Flag of South Africa.svg
Flag Border:true
Incumbent:1999–2004
Date Dissolved:
Government Head Title:President
Government Head:Thabo Mbeki
Deputy Government Head Title:Deputy President
Deputy Government Head:Jacob Zuma
Members Number:27 ministers
Legislature Status:Majority
Opposition Leader:Tony Leon
Election:1999 election
Legislature Term:Second Parliament
Previous:Mandela
Successor:Mbeki II

The first cabinet of Thabo Mbeki was the cabinet of the government of South Africa from 18 June 1999 until 29 April 2004. It was established by President Mbeki after his ascension to the presidency in the 1999 general election, replacing the transitional Government of National Unity. It remained in office until the next general election in 2004. Comprising 27 ministers, it was dominated by the majority party, the African National Congress, although the Inkatha Freedom Party also held three positions.

Establishment

After South Africa's second democratic general election in June 1999, the National Assembly of South Africa elected Thabo Mbeki to succeed Nelson Mandela as the President of South Africa. Mbeki had been the Deputy President of South Africa in Mandela's cabinet, which was a Government of National Unity formed by Mandela's African National Congress (ANC), the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP), and, until 1996, the National Party. Mbeki announced his new cabinet on 17 June 1999.[1]

The ANC had won a comfortable majority in the National Assembly and the Constitution of 1996 did not make any formal provision for power-sharing, but Mbeki opted informally to extend Mandela's Government of National Unity by maintaining IFP representation in the cabinet, in exchange for a similar form of power-sharing in Lionel Mtshali's KwaZulu-Natal Executive Council. Three cabinet posts were therefore held by members of the IFP, while the rest were held by the ANC.[2]

Mbeki retained many of Mandela's ministers,[3] though he increased the number of women ministers to eight of 27.[4] The other major development in the cabinet announcement was the establishment of two new cabinet posts, the Minister of Intelligence Services and the Minister in the Presidency.[5] The Guardians Chris McGreal expected the first Minister in the Presidency, Essop Pahad, to become an "enforcer" in Mbeki's "super-presidency", and he did indeed become a powerful figure in Mbeki's national executive.[6]

Reshuffles

During the cabinet's five-year term, Mbeki did not effect any major cabinet reshuffles but instead made individual appointments on three occasions after two resignations and one death. The first such reshuffle was occasioned when Joe Nhlanhla, the Minister of Intelligence Services, suffered a debilitating stroke in 2000. In January 2001, Mbeki appointed Lindiwe Sisulu to replace him.[7]

The second reshuffle occurred over a year later in May 2002, when Charles Nqakula was appointed as Minister of Safety and Security following the death of the incumbent, Minister Steve Tshwete.[8] [9]

In December 2002, at the ANC's 51st National Conference, Minister Sankie Mthembi-Mahanyele was elected to the full-time position of ANC Deputy Secretary General and consequently resigned from the cabinet in the New Year.[10] In February 2003, Brigitte Mabandla was appointed to replace her as Minister of Housing.[11]

Finally, the Minister of Transport, Dullah Omar, died in March 2004.[12] Less than two months later the cabinet was dissolved after the April 2004 general election and replaced by Mbeki's second-term cabinet.[13]

List of ministers

PostMinisterTermParty
President of South AfricaHis Excellency Thabo Mbeki19992004ANC
Deputy President of South AfricaHis Excellency Jacob Zuma19992004ANC
Minister in the PresidencyThe Hon. Essop Pahad19992004ANC
Minister of Agriculture and Land AffairsThe Hon. Thoko Didiza19992004ANC
Minister of Arts, Culture, Science and TechnologyThe Hon. Ben Ngubane19992004IFP
Minister of Correctional ServicesThe Hon. Ben Skosana19992004IFP
Minister of DefenceThe Hon. Mosiuoa Lekota19992004ANC
Minister of EducationThe Hon. Kader Asmal19992004ANC
Minister of Environmental Affairs and TourismThe Hon. Valli Moosa19992004ANC
Minister of FinanceThe Hon. Trevor Manuel19992004ANC
Minister of Foreign AffairsThe Hon. Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma19992004ANC
Minister of HealthThe Hon. Manto Tshabalala-Msimang19992004ANC
Minister of Home AffairsThe Hon. Mangosuthu Buthelezi19992004IFP
Minister of HousingThe Hon. Brigitte Mabandla20032004ANC
The Hon. Sankie Mthembi-Mahanyele19992003ANC
Minister of Intelligence ServicesThe Hon. Lindiwe Sisulu20012004ANC
The Hon. Joe Nhlanhla19992000ANC
Minister of Justice and Constitutional DevelopmentThe Hon. Penuell Maduna19992004ANC
Minister of LabourThe Hon. Shepherd Mdladlana19992004ANC
Minister of Minerals and EnergyThe Hon. Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka19992004ANC
Minister of Posts, Telecommunications and BroadcastingThe Hon. Ivy Matsepe-Casaburri19992004ANC
Minister of Provincial and Local GovernmentThe Hon. Sydney Mufamadi19992004ANC
Minister of Public EnterprisesThe Hon. Jeff Radebe19992004ANC
Minister of Public Service and AdministrationThe Hon. Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi19992004ANC
Minister of Public WorksThe Hon. Stella Sigcau19992004ANC
Minister of Safety and SecurityThe Hon. Charles Nqakula20022004ANC
The Hon. Steve Tshwete19992002ANC
Minister of Social DevelopmentThe Hon. Zola Skweyiya19992004ANC
Minister of Sport and RecreationThe Hon. Ngconde Balfour19992004ANC
Minister of Trade and IndustryThe Hon. Alec Erwin19992004ANC
Minister of TransportOffice vacant
The Hon. Dullah Omar19992004ANC
Minister of Water Affairs and ForestryThe Hon. Ronnie Kasrils19992004ANC

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 17 June 1999 . Mbeki names his cabinet . 2024-07-01 . BBC News.
  2. News: Murphy . Dean E. . 18 June 1999 . Cabinet Shuffle in South Africa: New leader Mbeki reorganizes, but without upsetting equilibrium . 2 July 2024 . SFGate.
  3. Web site: 1999-06-17 . Reaction to Cabinet mostly positive . 2024-07-01 . The Mail & Guardian . en-ZA.
  4. News: McGreal . Chris . 1999-06-18 . Mbeki doubles women in cabinet . 2024-07-01 . The Guardian . en-GB . 0261-3077.
  5. Web site: 17 June 1999 . Mbeki's cabinet . 2024-07-01 . BBC News.
  6. Web site: 1999 . Tough at the top . 2024-07-01 . Helen Suzman Foundation . en-us.
  7. Web site: 24 January 2001 . Mbeki reshuffles cabinet . 2024-06-05 . News24 . en-US.
  8. Web site: 6 May 2002 . Tshwete's successor named . 2023-08-06 . News24 . en-US.
  9. Web site: 2002 . Cabinet reshuffle a family affair . 2023-08-05 . The Mail & Guardian . en-ZA.
  10. Web site: 2003-01-27 . The race is on to find new housing minister . 2024-07-01 . The Mail & Guardian . en-ZA.
  11. Web site: 2003-02-28 . Mabandla’s appointment based ‘purely on merit’ . 2024-07-01 . The Mail & Guardian . en-ZA.
  12. Web site: 2004-03-12 . SA mourns death of Dullah Omar . 2024-07-01 . The Mail & Guardian . en-ZA.
  13. Web site: 28 April 2004 . Mbeki's cabinet list . 2023-08-05 . News24 . en-US.