Unions and broken State apparatus

Loading player...
If you are building an organisation which is in public service, should you have to reveal all your funding sources? We have seen the erosion of State institutions over the past 20 years - can the poor survive without functional state apparatus? Is the relationship between unions and the ANC surreptitious? Do South Africans have a viable alternative political party to vote for? Nando's · The Burning Platform
3 Dec 2020 English South Africa Politics · News

Other recent episodes

Democracy vs Reality: Why South Africans Are Losing Faith in Voting

South Africa is a young democracy, yet its voters are ageing while optimism continues to fade. Every election cycle raises the same concerns about youth disengagement and low voter turnout, but the deeper issue may not be a lack of understanding—it may be a loss of belief in impact. For…
23 Apr 33 min

Has education transformation worked?

What has 30 years of education reform in South Africa actually produced? For more than three decades, James Urdang has worked at the intersection of education, civil society, and social change. As the founder of Education Africa, his work has been shaped by a clear belief that education remains one…
22 Apr 40 min

Broken basics: who’s responsible?

Who is responsible when service delivery stops working, and how do we fix it? Phumi Mashigo moderates this timely conversation with a panel of politicians on the state of infrastructure in South Africa’s urban centres, the barriers to delivery, and the solutions needed to rebuild confidence in our cities. Featuring…
16 Apr 55 min

Tobacco Bill Chaos: You Could Be Arrested for Smoking in Your Own Car

In this episode, Phumi sits down with a parliamentarian to unpack the real impact of the bill, from controversial definitions of “smoking” to the unintended consequences for informal traders and the economy. They discuss: Why smokers could technically be arrested in their own cars or homes The explosive growth of…
26 Mar 18 min