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Second cabinet of Thabo Mbeki


FieldValue
cabinet_nameSecond Mbeki Cabinet
cabinet_number3rd
jurisdictionthe Republic of South Africa
(since the 1994 election)
flagFlag of South Africa.svg
incumbent2004–2008
imageThabo Mbeki - World Economic Forum on Africa 2008 (cropped).jpg
captionThabo Mbeki (2008)
date_formed
date_dissolved
()
government_head_titlePresident
government_headThabo Mbeki
deputy_government_head_titleDeputy President
deputy_government_head
members_number28 ministers
political_parties
legislature_statusMajority
opposition_partiesDemocratic Alliance
opposition_leaders
election2004 election
legislature_termThird Parliament
previousMbeki I
successorMotlanthe

(since the 1994 election) ()

The second cabinet of Thabo Mbeki was the cabinet of the government of South Africa from 29 April 2004 until 24 September 2008. It was in office for the duration of Mbeki's second term in the South African Presidency, which lasted between the 2004 general election and Mbeki's resignation from office on 24 September 2008.

The cabinet comprised 28 ministers and was reshuffled twice, once in June 2005 and once in May 2006. In addition to members of Mbeki's African National Congress, it included one minister apiece from the New National Party and Azanian People's Organisation.

Cabinet

After the April 2004 general election, Thabo Mbeki was elected to his second and final term as President of South Africa. On 28 April 2004, he announced his new cabinet. Although his political party, the African National Congress (ANC), had won a supermajority in the election, he invited two opposition parties – the New National Party (NNP) and the Azanian People's Organisation (AZAPO) – to fill a cabinet post apiece. The Inkatha Freedom Party was not represented.

About half of the appointments were unchanged from Mbeki's outgoing first-term cabinet, and only six new ministers were appointed. The only major organisational change was Mbeki's decision to sever the Ministry of Arts and Culture from the Ministry of Science and Technology; until then they had been unified as the Ministry of Arts, Culture, Science and Technology. The 28-member cabinet included 12 women, an increase from Mbeki's first term.

Reshuffles

The most dramatic change in the cabinet's composition occurred on 14 June 2005, when Mbeki announced his decision to remove Jacob Zuma from the Deputy Presidency. The sacking was the result of developments in ongoing corruption allegations against Zuma. Mbeki appointed Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka to succeed Zuma as the Deputy President, and in turn appointed Lindiwe Hendricks to succeed Mlambo-Ngcuka as Minister of Minerals and Energy.

The Minister of Public Works, Stella Sigcau, died less than a year later. In the aftermath of her death, on 22 May 2006, Mbeki announced his most extensive cabinet reshuffle, which resulted in the appointment to cabinet of Lulu Xingwana; it also affected three other ministers.

List of ministers

PostMinisterTermParty
President of South AfricaHis Excellency Thabo Mbeki2004
Deputy President of South AfricaHer Excellency Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka2005
His Excellency Jacob Zuma20042005
Minister in the PresidencyThe Hon. Essop Pahad2004
Minister of Agriculture and Land AffairsThe Hon. Lulu Xingwana2006
The Hon. Thoko Didiza20042006
Minister of Arts and CultureThe Hon. Pallo Jordan2004
Minister of CommunicationsThe Hon. Ivy Matsepe-Casaburri2004
Minister of Correctional ServicesThe Hon. Ngconde Balfour2004
Minister of DefenceThe Hon. Mosiuoa Lekota2004
Minister of EducationThe Hon. Naledi Pandor2004
New National Party (South Africa)}}"Minister of Environmental Affairs and TourismThe Hon. Marthinus van Schalkwyk2004
Minister of FinanceThe Hon. Trevor Manuel2004
Minister of Foreign AffairsThe Hon. Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma2004
Minister of HealthThe Hon. Manto Tshabalala-Msimang2004
Minister of Home AffairsThe Hon. Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula2004
Minister of HousingThe Hon. Lindiwe Sisulu2004
Minister of IntelligenceThe Hon. Ronnie Kasrils2004
Minister of Justice and Constitutional DevelopmentThe Hon. Brigitte Mabandla2004
Minister of LabourThe Hon. Shepherd Mdladlana2004
Minister of Minerals and EnergyThe Hon. Buyi Sonjica2006
The Hon. Lindiwe Hendricks20052006
The Hon. Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka20042005
Minister of Provincial and Local GovernmentThe Hon. Sydney Mufamadi2004
Minister of Public EnterprisesThe Hon. Alec Erwin2004
Minister of Public Service and AdministrationThe Hon. Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi2004
Minister of Public WorksThe Hon. Thoko Didiza2006
The Hon. Stella Sigcau20042006
Minister of Safety and SecurityThe Hon. Charles Nqakula2004
Azanian People's Organisation}}"Minister of Science and TechnologyThe Hon. Mosibudi Mangena2004
Minister of Social DevelopmentThe Hon. Zola Skweyiya2004
Minister of Sport and RecreationThe Hon. Arnold Stofile2004
Minister of Trade and IndustryThe Hon. Mandisi Mpahlwa2004
Minister of TransportThe Hon. Jeff Radebe2004
Minister of Water Affairs and ForestryThe Hon. Lindiwe Hendricks2006
The Hon. Buyi Sonjica20042006

List of deputy ministers

Although deputy ministers are not members of the South African Cabinet, they are appointed by the president and assist cabinet ministers in the execution of their duties. At the same time as he announced his cabinet on 28 April 2004, Mbeki appointed 21 deputy ministers to serve below the cabinet. For the first time, he appointed two Deputy Ministers of Foreign Affairs to serve together.**** Two of the deputy ministers, Gert Oosthuizen of the ANC and Ntopile Kganyago of the opposition United Democratic Movement, were not sworn in until 10 May 2004.

In his minor reshuffle of June 2005, Mbeki appointed two Deputy Ministers of Trade and Industry, Rob Davies and Elizabeth Thabethe; until then there had been only one deputy minister, Lindiwe Hendricks, who was promoted to cabinet in the reshuffle.After this, Mbeki made two further changes to his corps of deputy ministers. First, on 25 January 2006, he announced that Cheryl Gillwald would resign as Deputy Minister of Correctional Services at the end of the month; he appointed Loretta Jacobus to replace her.**** Second, in a decision that sparked international controversy, he fired Nozizwe Madlala-Routledge as Deputy Minister of Health on 8 August 2007.

Mbeki did not appoint deputy ministers in the Ministries of Housing, Intelligence, Labour, Public Service and Administration, Public Enterprises, Transport, or Water Affairs and Forestry, nor did he appoint a deputy minister in the Presidency. In addition, when Lulu Xingwana was promoted to the cabinet in his May 2006 reshuffle, he did not appoint anybody to replace her as Deputy Minister of Minerals and Energy.**** Likewise, after Madlala-Routledge was dismissed, the position of Deputy Minister of Health remained vacant until the end of the cabinet's term.

PostMinisterTermParty
Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Land AffairsThe Hon. Dirk du Toit2004
Deputy Minister of Arts and CultureThe Hon. Ntombazana Botha2004
Deputy Minister of CommunicationsThe Hon. Roy Padayachie2004
Deputy Minister of Correctional ServicesThe Hon. Loretta Jacobus2006
The Hon. Cheryl Gillwald20042006
Deputy Minister of DefenceThe Hon. Mluleki George2004
Deputy Minister of EducationThe Hon. Enver Surty2004
African National Congress}}"Deputy Minister of Environmental Affairs and TourismThe Hon. Joyce Mabudafhasi2004
Deputy Minister of FinanceThe Hon. Jabu Moleketi2004
Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs 1stThe Hon. Aziz Pahad2004
African National Congress}}"Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs 2ndThe Hon. Sue van der Merwe2004
Deputy Minister of Health*Office vacant*
The Hon. Nozizwe Madlala-Routledge20042007
Deputy Minister of Home AffairsThe Hon. Malusi Gigaba2004
Deputy Minister of Justice and Constitutional DevelopmentThe Hon. Johnny de Lange2004
Deputy Minister of Minerals and Energy*Office vacant*
The Hon. Lulu Xingwana20042006
Deputy Minister of Provincial and Local GovernmentThe Hon. Nomatyala Hangana2004
United Democratic Movement}}"Deputy Minister of Public WorksThe Hon. Ntopile Kganyago2004
Deputy Minister of Safety and SecurityThe Hon. Susan Shabangu2004
African National Congress}}"Deputy Minister of Science and TechnologyThe Hon. Derek Hanekom2004
Deputy Minister of Social DevelopmentThe Hon. Jean Benjamin2004
Deputy Minister of Sport and RecreationThe Hon. Gert Oosthuizen2004
African National Congress}}"Deputy Minister of Trade and Industry 1stThe Hon. Rob Davies2005
The Hon. Lindiwe Hendricks20042005
African National Congress}}"Deputy Minister of Trade and Industry 2ndThe Hon. Elizabeth Thabethe2005

References

References

  1. (2004-04-28). "S. African President Names New Cabinet".
  2. (29 April 2004). "Meet Mbeki's 'delivery' team". IOL.
  3. (28 April 2004). "Mbeki's cabinet list".
  4. (28 April 2004). "Mbeki reaches out with new cabinet".
  5. (2005-06-14). "Deputy president sacked".
  6. Vasagar, Jeevan. (2005-06-14). "Mbeki fires deputy in corruption scandal". The Guardian.
  7. (22 June 2005). "Statement on Cabinet meeting of 22 June 2005".
  8. (22 May 2006). "T Mbeki announces cabinet appointments".
  9. (2006-05-22). "Mbeki reshuffles Cabinet following Sigcau's death".
  10. (2004-04-30). "Second in command".
  11. (2005). "Electoral Politics in South Africa: Assessing the First Democratic Decade". Palgrave Macmillan.
  12. (2004-05-10). "Mbeki welcomes two new deputy ministers".
  13. (25 January 2006). "Statement on Cabinet meeting of 25 January 2006".
  14. (2 February 2006). "N Balfour on appointment of new Deputy Minister L Jacobus".
  15. (2 February 2006). "Prisons gets new deputy".
  16. (2007). "The unjustifiable firing of Nozizwe Madlala-Routledge". The Lancet.
  17. Sidley, Pat. (2007-08-18). "South African health minister sacked after attending AIDS conference". BMJ.
  18. (2007-08-09). "Madlala-Routledge's dismissal slammed".
  19. Majavu, Anna. (26 September 2008). "Winners, losers in cabinet shuffle". [[The Sowetan]].
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