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Reflective Steenhuisen asks Roman Cabanac to quit after internal DA backlash and public outrage

Facing a wave of criticism from within the party and mounting concerns about the negative public attention directed at his office, DA leader and Agriculture Minister John Steenhuisen has asked his chief of staff, Roman Cabanac, to resign.
Reflective Steenhuisen asks Roman Cabanac to quit after internal DA backlash and public outrage Mounting internal pressure and the negative public attention directed at his office forced the minister of agriculture, DA leader John Steenhuisen, to ask his newly appointed chief of staff, Roman Cabanac, to resign. Sources within the DA told Daily Maverick many party members were unhappy with Cabanac’s appointment, warning that it risked alienating voters and undermining the party’s efforts to present itself as a unifying force in South African politics. “A chief of staff cannot be on the news more than his principal,” said a senior DA member.  “He had to go or John was going to spend a lot of time defending the appointment and not the work of his office.”  Steenhuisen’s appointment of the controversial podcaster in August sparked consternation within the DA and concerns from longstanding DA supporters. A chief of staff is in the third-highest salary band in the government, with an annual remuneration of almost R1.4-million in taxpayers’ money. Despite a recent attempt by Cabanac to distance himself from his past by acknowledging the harmful nature of his previous statements, his lack of a direct apology only fuelled the growing backlash. Read more: By rewarding Roman Cabanac’s bigotry, Steenhuisen risks the future of the GNU [caption id="attachment_2360539" align="alignnone" width="1629"] John Steenhuisen gives a speech to the Cape Town Press Club. (Photo: Screengrab)[/caption] On Thursday afternoon, during a question and answer session after he gave a speech at the Cape Town Press Club, Steenhuisen announced that he had asked Cabanac to resign. He said he informed the DA’s Federal Executive about his decision at a meeting on Wednesday.  “I have had a conversation with Mr Cabanac over the course of the past few days, and I’m happy to admit we don’t always get it right. We never will. People make mistakes; people don’t always get it right. And I think you should be judged on what you do when that mistake has been made — it’s been pointed out to you — and what you do thereafter. “There has been a conversation with Mr Cabanac. There is a human resources discussion that’s under way,” he said.  “I found it far too distracting from the work of my ministry and our government that he is the news story, rather than the work of the department, and I have asked him, therefore, whether he would consider stepping aside,” he said to applause.  Steenhuisen added that he took “full responsibility” for Cabanac’s controversial appointment.  “In hindsight, there should’ve been a little bit more due diligence done. In hindsight, there should have been greater foresight. But in an environment of a meteor shower coming in after an election, going straight into an intense negotiation, and having an imperative to start performing and doing your duties, I think one could be forgiven slightly for some of the mistakes that do get made along the way,” he said.  Labour lawyer Kgomotso Mufamadi said it may be difficult to remove Cabanac if he refused to resign, which could compel the ministry to offer him a golden handshake — a payment made in the context of a mutual separation agreement.  “The employee has that right [to not agree to a mutual separation agreement],” said Mufamadi. “The employer would then have to find a way to take him through a lawful process. [The employer] might be able to demonstrate that if, for example, the employee did not disclose or explain what he was doing before, and the minister [could say], ‘Actually, now I find this person to be incompatible with the values of the organisation.’”  Mufamadi noted that proving incompatibility as a form of incapacity was challenging.  “The minister’s best bet is to try [to] negotiate some sort of separation agreement. The employee is under no obligation to resign and, if pressured, could claim constructive dismissal, arguing that the working conditions became intolerable because his employer made it clear he was no longer wanted in the organisation.”   [caption id="attachment_2353959" align="alignnone" width="1340"]russia cabanac Ministry of Agriculture chief of staff Roman Cabanac. (Screenshot: @romancab87)[/caption]

Cadre deployment 

Responding to a question, Steenhuisen said Cabanac’s appointment was not a form of cadre deployment, as Cabanac was not a member of the DA.  The DA recently confirmed it would pursue its legal challenge to have the ANC’s practice of cadre deployment declared unlawful and unconstitutional. “I think we also need to understand what is cadre deployment and what is not cadre deployment, because I think some people get caught in the weeds sometimes,” said Steenhuisen.  There were two kinds of employees in government, he said: political employees whose term was linked to the term of office of the office bearer, and “permanent civil servants that are appointed in the public service”.  “Political employees are a feature of political offices the world over… Every politician has an office where political people are appointed to work with them. Those political appointments’ term is linked to the term of office of the public office bearer — the day they go, so too do the deployees go.” Steenhuisen said there had never been any “beef” from the DA about people employed in ministers’ offices. Western Cape Premier Alan Winde, Cape Town Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis and Tshwane Mayor Cilliers Brink “all have political office staff in their office”, he said.  “That is not cadre deployment, that is a political deployment in the office of a political principal… Cadre deployment is taking people based on a party affiliation, not on merit, and inserting them into full-time public service positions, [like the] boards of SOEs [state-owned enterprises] and the like.”  Steenhuisen’s decision to dismiss Cabanac is seen as an attempt to restore confidence in his leadership and mitigate the damage caused by the controversy. It also reflects the broader challenges faced by the DA as it seeks to navigate a delicate balance between its more traditional voter base and attempts to broaden its appeal.  As it stands, the DA is one of the few stable parties heading to the 2026 local government elections. The party believes it can bag more municipalities through its participation in the Government of National Unity.  On Wednesday, the party won 16 wards in by-elections across five provinces — five wards in each of North West, Free State and eThekwini and one in Limpopo.  Read more: DA retains electoral mining rights in Odendaalsrus, adds to huge Free State haul with easy Mangaung wins This comes after the party recently lost control of some municipalities in the Western Cape, including Langeberg, Theewaterskloof and Oudtshoorn. DM

Mounting internal pressure and the negative public attention directed at his office forced the minister of agriculture, DA leader John Steenhuisen, to ask his newly appointed chief of staff, Roman Cabanac, to resign.

Sources within the DA told Daily Maverick many party members were unhappy with Cabanac’s appointment, warning that it risked alienating voters and undermining the party’s efforts to present itself as a unifying force in South African politics.

“A chief of staff cannot be on the news more than his principal,” said a senior DA member. 

“He had to go or John was going to spend a lot of time defending the appointment and not the work of his office.” 

Steenhuisen’s appointment of the controversial podcaster in August sparked consternation within the DA and concerns from longstanding DA supporters. A chief of staff is in the third-highest salary band in the government, with an annual remuneration of almost R1.4-million in taxpayers’ money.

Despite a recent attempt by Cabanac to distance himself from his past by acknowledging the harmful nature of his previous statements, his lack of a direct apology only fuelled the growing backlash.

Read more: By rewarding Roman Cabanac’s bigotry, Steenhuisen risks the future of the GNU

John Steenhuisen gives a speech to the Cape Town Press Club. (Photo: Screengrab)



On Thursday afternoon, during a question and answer session after he gave a speech at the Cape Town Press Club, Steenhuisen announced that he had asked Cabanac to resign. He said he informed the DA’s Federal Executive about his decision at a meeting on Wednesday. 

“I have had a conversation with Mr Cabanac over the course of the past few days, and I’m happy to admit we don’t always get it right. We never will. People make mistakes; people don’t always get it right. And I think you should be judged on what you do when that mistake has been made — it’s been pointed out to you — and what you do thereafter.

“There has been a conversation with Mr Cabanac. There is a human resources discussion that’s under way,” he said. 

“I found it far too distracting from the work of my ministry and our government that he is the news story, rather than the work of the department, and I have asked him, therefore, whether he would consider stepping aside,” he said to applause. 

Steenhuisen added that he took “full responsibility” for Cabanac’s controversial appointment. 

“In hindsight, there should’ve been a little bit more due diligence done. In hindsight, there should have been greater foresight. But in an environment of a meteor shower coming in after an election, going straight into an intense negotiation, and having an imperative to start performing and doing your duties, I think one could be forgiven slightly for some of the mistakes that do get made along the way,” he said. 

Labour lawyer Kgomotso Mufamadi said it may be difficult to remove Cabanac if he refused to resign, which could compel the ministry to offer him a golden handshake — a payment made in the context of a mutual separation agreement. 

“The employee has that right [to not agree to a mutual separation agreement],” said Mufamadi.

“The employer would then have to find a way to take him through a lawful process. [The employer] might be able to demonstrate that if, for example, the employee did not disclose or explain what he was doing before, and the minister [could say], ‘Actually, now I find this person to be incompatible with the values of the organisation.’” 

Mufamadi noted that proving incompatibility as a form of incapacity was challenging. 

“The minister’s best bet is to try [to] negotiate some sort of separation agreement. The employee is under no obligation to resign and, if pressured, could claim constructive dismissal, arguing that the working conditions became intolerable because his employer made it clear he was no longer wanted in the organisation.”  

russia cabanac Ministry of Agriculture chief of staff Roman Cabanac. (Screenshot: @romancab87)


Cadre deployment 


Responding to a question, Steenhuisen said Cabanac’s appointment was not a form of cadre deployment, as Cabanac was not a member of the DA. 

The DA recently confirmed it would pursue its legal challenge to have the ANC’s practice of cadre deployment declared unlawful and unconstitutional.

“I think we also need to understand what is cadre deployment and what is not cadre deployment, because I think some people get caught in the weeds sometimes,” said Steenhuisen. 

There were two kinds of employees in government, he said: political employees whose term was linked to the term of office of the office bearer, and “permanent civil servants that are appointed in the public service”. 

“Political employees are a feature of political offices the world over… Every politician has an office where political people are appointed to work with them. Those political appointments’ term is linked to the term of office of the public office bearer — the day they go, so too do the deployees go.”

Steenhuisen said there had never been any “beef” from the DA about people employed in ministers’ offices. Western Cape Premier Alan Winde, Cape Town Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis and Tshwane Mayor Cilliers Brink “all have political office staff in their office”, he said. 

“That is not cadre deployment, that is a political deployment in the office of a political principal… Cadre deployment is taking people based on a party affiliation, not on merit, and inserting them into full-time public service positions, [like the] boards of SOEs [state-owned enterprises] and the like.” 

Steenhuisen’s decision to dismiss Cabanac is seen as an attempt to restore confidence in his leadership and mitigate the damage caused by the controversy. It also reflects the broader challenges faced by the DA as it seeks to navigate a delicate balance between its more traditional voter base and attempts to broaden its appeal. 

As it stands, the DA is one of the few stable parties heading to the 2026 local government elections. The party believes it can bag more municipalities through its participation in the Government of National Unity. 

On Wednesday, the party won 16 wards in by-elections across five provinces — five wards in each of North West, Free State and eThekwini and one in Limpopo. 

Read more: DA retains electoral mining rights in Odendaalsrus, adds to huge Free State haul with easy Mangaung wins

This comes after the party recently lost control of some municipalities in the Western Cape, including Langeberg, Theewaterskloof and Oudtshoorn. DM

Comments

Fanie Rajesh Ngabiso Sep 12, 2024, 11:16 PM

I think you've done the right thing @JS The more I follow politics, the more I observe the democratic ship to be piloted by the subjectivity and ignorance of the sailors manning it. Fact and objectivity place a very distant second, even with the most erudite of voters.

Noelsoyizwap Sep 13, 2024, 11:55 AM

Back in the days, some had a slogan: "Don't lead, I may not follow, Don't follow, I may not lead." In a democracy, leader & follower relationship is inextricably intertwined. So, the way JS acted is a true testament to that. DA = 10 points and the rest, a -10.

William Grunow Sep 12, 2024, 11:18 PM

This is good news!

Kevin Venter Sep 13, 2024, 03:50 AM

In stark contrast to the Justice Minister still prancing around parliament when she has been implicated in corruption. JS blundered in appointing Roman, he would have known there would be blow back. That said, at least JS has now taken remedial action, cannot say the same for Cyril!

Malcolm McManus Sep 13, 2024, 07:34 AM

Yes, Lets hope it sets a precedent. Hopefully other parties in the GNU can learn from this. Not that it was in any way a remotely good idea to appoint Cabanac in the first place. But at least sense prevailed and the issue dealt with. We need to get rid of many bad apples in the GNU.

James Francis Sep 13, 2024, 07:39 AM

Agreed.

James Francis Sep 13, 2024, 07:43 AM

The DA retains its reputation as a party of unity and principle, sorely needed in our political arena. I applaud it for admitting it made a mistake, and for DM to raise the alarm about this. Time to activate my subscription again.

Justin Vickers Sep 13, 2024, 05:44 AM

The damage is done. How tone deaf could a leader possibly be. Truly unbelievable!

J vN Sep 13, 2024, 06:41 AM

Totally manufactured outrage, largely driven by tired media hacks who can't stand blasphemy against their backward woke religion, especially not from a white, heterosexual man. And because of the woke trash peddled by the media, every week we receive mails begging us for donations from this site.

Johnny Kessel Sep 13, 2024, 07:29 AM

?

James Francis Sep 13, 2024, 07:39 AM

Go read Cabanac's statement. This was not manufactured.

J vN Sep 13, 2024, 07:47 AM

Cabanac only made the statement due to the pressure from the hysterical woke media, whose empty little heads exploded because a white dude dared to speak the factual truth. Cabanac has never been convicted of any crime, but still the extremist media hacks wanted his head.

Thea Clifford Jackson Sep 13, 2024, 12:47 PM

Cabanac made the statement because he got called out. Steenhuizen wouldn’t have acted if the media hadn’t highlighted this idiot. You do the crime, you do the time.

snifft Sep 13, 2024, 12:56 PM

there you go again with the "woke"

D'Esprit Dan Sep 13, 2024, 04:38 PM

Nothing else to offer. Absolutely nothing.

B M Sep 13, 2024, 06:59 PM

Whether you are right or not about the "factual truth" here, the appointment was a political blunder. Kudos to JS for rectifying, and making a successful political call here. In politics, perception is reality, and the game is played on perception.

Andrew Mortimer Sep 13, 2024, 08:04 AM

Never change JvN always quick to defend racists like Cabanac and Trump! Good on you for sticking to your guns! :)

Thea Clifford Jackson Sep 13, 2024, 12:49 PM

Yep. Fossils are stuck in the past & feel threatened by newfangled ideas like justice, truth & fairness.

D'Esprit Dan Sep 13, 2024, 08:08 AM

Yawn.

alexgordon1978 Sep 13, 2024, 08:26 AM

The leader of a "liberal" party should've known better than to appoint an opportunistic little right winger... how is the outrage manufactured?

Rodney Weidemann Sep 13, 2024, 10:28 AM

For someone who considers the DM to be such a woke, left-wing waste of time, you sure spend a lot of time reading it and commenting on its articles...

Noelsoyizwap Sep 13, 2024, 12:12 PM

It's much better dealing with you than the many thespians in our midst. Good for you, but with the hope that you will, one day, become active against racism and in building a united country.

Thea Clifford Jackson Sep 13, 2024, 12:44 PM

Why woke? Because the media identified a white racist in a senior governmental position?

snifft Sep 13, 2024, 12:54 PM

what do you mean by "woke religion"? Can you be more specific? And is "woke trash" similar in some way?

Over The Right Sep 13, 2024, 04:06 PM

If woke is I read books and don't burn them I embrace science I can change my mind Not all is black and white I believe in equality for all I embrace cooperation I respect other's rights I believe culture and arts has value I care for the planet and all of it's life Then I am woke.

D'Esprit Dan Sep 13, 2024, 04:39 PM

Well put!

Nj Hourquebie Sep 14, 2024, 07:43 AM

I will never understand how "woke" (i.e. being aware of what is going on in the world and taking a stand against injustice) is a bad thing. I agree with everything in this comment and I am proudly woke

Arnold O Managra Sep 16, 2024, 10:25 PM

But if woke is: I abhor opinions contrary to my beliefs I ignore science in favour of public acceptance I judge people by their skin colour I think there are oppressive races and oppressed races (mostly according to skin colour) Then, you are woke

Laurence Erasmus Sep 13, 2024, 07:11 AM

Cyril, are you watching and listening to the example set by John on how to swiftly deal with controversial political appointments that do not find favour with the majority of citizens?

Malcolm McManus Sep 13, 2024, 08:34 AM

I'm sure he is listening, but maybe like all cadres, he is scared to dish out discipline. It is after all a very undisciplined and corrupt organization. It must be a daunting task and one does wonder about possible skeletons falling out of his own closet, couch or mattress in the process.

endorest Sep 13, 2024, 07:37 AM

very sad! another defeat of freedom, pluralism, diversity (the real 'homo sapiens' diversity which is not one of genders, races or languages, but is diversity of ideas)

J vN Sep 13, 2024, 07:48 AM

To the left and the woke, you're guaranteed of your freedom of speech, PROVIDED you don't blaspheme against their backward cultural Marxism. Dare to do so, and you will be screamed down and cancelled by a choir of deranged woke media fanatics.

D'Esprit Dan Sep 13, 2024, 08:11 AM

Alice Copper's lyric "hey, hey, hey hey - hey stoopid" comes to mind here.

Ed Rybicki Sep 13, 2024, 09:11 AM

Why do you read the DM if it offends you so much? Run off back to Fox News, why don’t you?

Mortimer Lee Sep 13, 2024, 02:15 PM

JvN: you certainly succeed in ... single-handedly ... lowering the general standard of DM- discussions to unpalatable levels.

D'Esprit Dan Sep 14, 2024, 06:26 AM

It's actually a good thing to have posters like him on here. Yes, lowers the tone, but a sobering reminder that we still have sad, stuck in the past characters here who won't leave the laager.

endorest Sep 14, 2024, 04:51 PM

yes, he was not fired because he committed any crimes. He was fired because his ideas disagree with the ideas of the majority. The majority could have tolerated his minority ideas being expressed and ahve a denate between different ideas, but they were not able to tolerate different ideas.

Noelsoyizwap Sep 13, 2024, 01:54 PM

Freedom comes with responsibilities and diversity is explivitly encouraged in our bill of rights. However, racism is prohibited not only by the constitutional guarantee itself, but also in terms of section 9 of the Bill of Rights. He wouldn’t be fired for exercising diversity.

Noelsoyizwap Sep 13, 2024, 02:20 PM

Everyone at that level should know that freedom comes with responsibilities and SA laws encourages diversity. However flamatory racist utterances are prohibited, not only by constitutional guarantee, but also in terms of the Bill of Rights. He wouldn’t be fired for expressing diverse view points.

Johnny Kessel Sep 13, 2024, 07:48 AM

Do any of the idiot Totalitarians in this thread realise that this is not a DA Party deployment? Ramon is an employee of the Department of Agriculture and therefore they will need to fire him based upon performance, not political pressure.

D'Esprit Dan Sep 13, 2024, 08:13 AM

That's Roman, not Ramon. Appointed personally by the DA Minister, who is the Leader of the DA (when Helen allows it), so he is DA deployee. Sorry. WAS! You're ironically copying ANC 101, trying to find distance between party and state whenever something smelly sticks to your shoe!

Noelsoyizwap Sep 13, 2024, 12:17 PM

Make no mistake, "Roman" is a deployed Cadre in the agriculture portfolio.

Thea Clifford Jackson Sep 13, 2024, 12:51 PM

Maybe do your research before commenting?

Simon Rhoades Sep 13, 2024, 09:09 AM

A good move by Steenhuisen, but incredibly troubling that he has been interviewed by Cabanac a number of times and his interactions with him didn't raise any red flags. If you're an even vaguely online South African you're aware that Cabanac is a racist troll with a gun fetish.

Gavrel A Sep 13, 2024, 10:31 AM

Remember the DA poster issue in the July riots? As far as I know, Steenhuisen never apologized for that. It looks like that what Cabanac stands for doesn't conflicts with Steenhuisen's opinions.

endorest Sep 14, 2024, 04:57 PM

“He who stifles free discussion, secretly doubts whether what he professes to believe is really true.” – Wendell Phillips (1870) “You have not converted a man because you have silenced him.” – John Morley (1874)

Rodshep Sep 13, 2024, 09:35 AM

The best thing he's done so far, but one wonders at the appointment in the first place. Maybe he's not the correct person to lead the DA at all. I do hope Zille steps up and takes on the mantle once again, I enjoy her brand of politics.

Noelsoyizwap Sep 13, 2024, 12:33 PM

I agree. Being in the shadows working against her and the party. In 2014, DA topped the 22% mark, from a mare 16% of national vote 5 years before. Zille was experimental and much involved in building the DA.

williammichelson1947 Sep 13, 2024, 10:09 AM

Very disturbing that so many good people have chosen to exit the DA.I think we have a leadership crisis? This needs prompt attention.

Malcolm McManus Sep 13, 2024, 10:55 AM

I think this happens in most parties. Often for the individual to pursue their own personal goals. There can only be so many leaders. Some times to achieve personal ambition means moving on. I don't necessarily think its a leadership crisis. Have those people who have left achieved much?

Noelsoyizwap Sep 13, 2024, 12:41 PM

JS was only the better of what was available at the time of conference. Unfortunately, we will never be able to fairly compare his leadership to his predecessors. GNU is a totally different terrain and worse with ANC leaders in it. I only wish him strength.

Lucifer's Consiglieri Sep 13, 2024, 11:20 AM

Finally, sanity prevails. What is it about people who enter politics, that they seem to take so long to recognise realities? A misstep by JS, although not a disaster, it calls his judgement into question.

Thea Clifford Jackson Sep 13, 2024, 03:50 PM

Not for the first time either.

Thea Clifford Jackson Sep 13, 2024, 12:42 PM

JS took rather too long to give this twit the heave ho. That means he was seriously looking for a loophole. Shame on him.

Malcolm McManus Sep 13, 2024, 01:32 PM

He definitely got himself into a difficult position. I think it took him a while to find an exit plan once people reacted so negatively to his obvious error. I imagine to simply push someone out of a position so soon after you've appointed them would have taken some work and background negotiation.

peddledavid7 Sep 13, 2024, 01:04 PM

I reckon, after all this booha over Roman and what he said or meant to by the select few journalists who are the arbiters of all but the ANC he is going to return in his private capacity and roast these woke journalists one by one and won't they squeal in concert ANC de facto supporters.

Arnold O Managra Sep 13, 2024, 04:28 PM

I guess now Cabanc's podcasts will have much larger audiences. Win-win situation for Roman, but all in all pretty sad indictment of modern culture.

D'Esprit Dan Sep 13, 2024, 04:46 PM

Are you talking about the 'woke' journalists who risk their safety every day by uncovering ANC & EFF corruption? Wow! Maybe Roman can get a job cleaning used pizza boxes at his namesake's outlets!

Indeed Jhb Sep 13, 2024, 01:30 PM

Good move by JS - appointment was his prerogative but he must realise that anything he says or does will get severely scrutinised and beyond. Much made of the R1.4 mil 3rd highest bracket - that is what every chief director and some 'retention' policy people earn and more. A lot of them hopeless

Indeed Jhb Sep 13, 2024, 01:36 PM

Cabanac should ask for at least R10 mill in lieu of service interrupted - the former PP was found legally, not just public opinion, unqualified to do her job and she is 'entitled'. And now an MP

D'Esprit Dan Sep 13, 2024, 04:49 PM

She 'served' more years than he did days. Even Lettuce Liz Truss lasted longer than him!

Arnold O Managra Sep 13, 2024, 08:23 PM

South Africa has strong labour laws exactly for this situation - dismissal for non-work-performance-related reasons. Whatever you think of Roman, he is entitled to a golden handshake *unless* he decides to be the good guy and resign.

Arnold O Managra Sep 13, 2024, 04:26 PM

I guess the lesson is that cancel culture is alive and well. Viva twitter, Viva! ?

D'Esprit Dan Sep 13, 2024, 04:37 PM

And Gouws gone now! The pressure has told and the DA has thankfully done the right thing. They've shown what responsible governance is, and also, that sometimes a conviction isn't needed before you do what's right for South Africa. Bravo DA!

Arnold O Managra Sep 16, 2024, 10:54 PM

Politically this is "the right thing". If politics is non-democratic. The beauty of "democracy" is that you can choose, but you need to choose carefully, because you can only choose again in 3-5 years (typically). "Protest" culture, which is what this is, is just old tribal politics.