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DM168, Maverick News

Good manifesto: Social and spatial justice, an income grant and no bullying

Good manifesto: Social and spatial justice, an income grant and no bullying
Good has presented a clear idea of what it would focus on if it wins the election. But because that is unlikely, this should rather be treated as a guide to the kind of coalition partner Good could be. 

All about…



  • A simple and well-targeted manifesto;

  • It’s good; and

  • It’s the most overtly committed to the constitutional principle of social justice.


Basic income and social policy



  • A basic income grant of R999 per month for people living below the poverty line;

  • It can be funded through efficiencies –restructuring government, professionalising the public service and some tax reforms. (That probably means tax increases. Ed.); and

  • The old-age pension grant should work more like a pension fund, with funds invested in a universal pension fund.


Climate change and the environment



  • The party sees climate change action as a “moral obligation”; and

  • The primary way to mitigate climate change is through energy production.


Crime and corruption



  • A focus on crime prevention;

  • Psychosocial support rather than policing for substance abuse, mental health and economic stress;

  • A “Don’t shut up, speak up” campaign against gender-based violence to encourage and support its reporting;

  • Eliminating corruption is an ethical leadership requirement. Focused on detecting and preventing corruption, because too often it is discovered after it has been committed;

  • Proposes multi-agency anti-corruption task teams;

  • Supports a fully transparent digital procurement task team; and

  • Incentivise whistleblowers and fund the National Prosecuting Authority and the Special Investigating Unit better.


Economy



  • Inclusive economic growth policies to form pathways out of poverty;

  • Reduce income inequality between the CEO and the worker;

  • Eradicate the gender pay gap, where women earn 23%–35% less than men for the same work, according to the World Economic Forum;

  • Cut red tape;

  • Invest in green energy, tourism, manufacturing, ICT and infrastructure; and

  • Public works programmes: cleaning river banks, parks, beaches and other recreational areas. Cleaning roads, pavements, storm water drains and culverts. Upgrade and maintain sidewalks.


Education



  • Invest in early childhood education;

  • Completely eradicate pit toilets at schools;

  • More social services in schools for learners and educators; and

  • More vocational and artisan skills training.


Global policy



  • Support reform of the global UN Security Council, International Money Fund and World Bank;

  • Aligned with the Global South; and

  • Forthright on support for Palestine and a two-state solution.


Governance



  • Rethink the role and size of the national and provincial governments.

  • Political leaders should not be involved in the recruitment of a professional public service.

  • Increased public service set-asides for people living with disabilities.


Jobs



  • Sees investing in public infrastructure (electricity, transport, water, housing, digital communication) as the basis for real economic growth, resulting in more jobs.

  • Jobs also created by providing financial support for small businesses and investing more in public employment programmes.


Land



  • A focus on spatial justice in cities;

  • More subsidised and affordable housing on land that is close to job opportunities in cities, or bring jobs closer to people;

  • Release public land for land reform, black empowerment, poverty alleviation and job creation; and

  • Proper restitution for victims of apartheid through land or monetary compensation.


Housing



  • Increase the supply of social and community housing connected to critical infrastructure with better free supplies (electricity, water, sanitation, etc);

  • Access to title deeds: transfer rental stock to long-term tenants; regularise the informal market with title transfers in the RDP housing market;

  • Make urban informal settlements formal; and

  • Temporary housing for homeless people.


Power cuts



  • Actively supports renewable energy as the way to end load shedding because ”green energy is the cheapest and most effective form of energy production”;

  • A rapid transition to renewable energy in the private sector; and

  • Supports a just transition for coal industry workers and nearby communities in coal belts.


LGBTQIA+



  • Safe, happier lives for LGBTQIA+ people;

  • Anti-bullying campaign in schools; and

  • A culture of love for the LGBTQIA+ community.


Transport



  • Integrated and affordable transport through a single local government transport authority; and

  • Integrate land use and development with public transport.


Reality check



  • It’s a small and focused manifesto with a clear view of the world and of what the party would do.

  • Good is unlikely to win the election, so it gives a sense of what kind of partner it would be in coalition governments.


What’s good



  • The focus on the LGBTQIA+ community is essential, and the proposal for a basic income grant is clear. DM


 

This article first appeared in our weekly Daily Maverick newspaper, DM168, which is available countrywide for R29.