Sunday, May 24, 2026

Cosatu backs Public Procurement Act as City of Cape Town challenges it in court

Date:

What’s Happening with the Public Procurement Act?

Cosatu Speaks Up

The Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) says it supports the new Public Procurement Act. Their spokesperson, Matthew Parks, argues that the law is needed to stop corruption and give small, black‑owned businesses a fair chance. He worries that taking the case to the Constitutional Court is “putting the cart before the horse” and believes the issues should be sorted out by talking to Treasury instead.

City of Cape Town & Western Cape Push Back

The City of Cape Town and the Western Cape provincial government have taken the Act to court. Their main points are:

  • Not enough public input: They claim Parliament didn’t fully consider all the feedback, especially after changes made by the National Council of Provinces in 2023.
  • Slower service delivery: Centralising procurement could create red tape that delays water, sanitation, electricity, waste, and environmental projects.
  • Loss of local autonomy: Municipalities would lose the power to make quick decisions in emergencies and would have to rely on a national system that could fail.
  • More bureaucracy: About 36 parts of the Bill need new regulations, which could bring hidden costs and extra paperwork.
  • PPP complications: Public‑private partnerships might become too complex and time‑consuming.

Mayor Geordin Hill‑Lewis summed it up by saying the Act “undermines the aim to fight corruption” because of its flawed process and the extra red tape it creates.

Why Cosatu Backs the Law

Cosatu sees the Act as a tool to:

  • Boost emerging SMMEs and historically disadvantaged communities.
  • Fight state capture and corruption, especially in state‑owned enterprises and municipalities.
  • Create a single, transparent online procurement system that makes it harder for corrupt deals to hide.
  • Encourage buying local – cutting out middlemen and reducing the flood of cheap imported goods that inflate prices.

Parks adds that if the Court scraps the Act, badly needed reforms could be delayed for years, which South Africa can’t afford.

Looking for a Middle Ground

Both sides agree that excessive red tape is a problem. Cosatu suggests:

  • Urgent talks between Treasury, the city, and the province to tweak the regulations.
  • Keeping the goal of a transparent, central system while fixing the practical worries about speed and local control.

The mayor’s team says they’re open to dialogue but insists any solution must protect municipalities’ ability to act fast and keep their own supplier databases.

Conclusion

The debate over the Public Procurement Act boils down to a clash between national anti‑corruption goals and local government’s need for speed and autonomy. Cosatu sees the law as a necessary step toward clean, fair buying practices, while Cape Town and the Western Cape warn it could choke service delivery with bureaucracy. The Constitutional Court’s pending decision will shape how South Africa balances these priorities moving forward.

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