The ANC succession debate is beginning to take shape ahead of its 2027 elective conference, with former minister Tokyo Sexwale emerging as a possible contender after a lobby…
Urban voters navigating the daily realities of transport breakdowns, potholes, water outages, electricity instability, crime and failing municipalities are not impressed by…
The party’s secretary general said he was only halfway through his current job and was focusing on rebuilding the party
The former Gauteng premier said the ANC, not Jacob Zuma, was the true custodian of the uMkhonto weSizwe brand This content is restricted to registered users and subscribers. Get…
ANC Chairperson Panyaza Lesufi said the party was bringing out its heavyweights to with the province by more than 55%
They have on the whole served satisfactorily, but the department has also been marred by decades of maladministration and corruption
Co-founded by Tokyo Sexwale, the electrified series is set to go racing in 2024
A credible campaign is one that involves the essence of the ANC and individual character
Zandile Mafe took a nap outside parliament. Does that make him a sleeper agent?
The businessman alleges that money from a heritage fund meant for the poor has been stolen. But treasury and the Reserve Bank have called the fund a scam
The La Liga champion’s visit is seen as a major score not just for the Pretoria club, but South African football as a whole
A delayed elective congress and ongoing Bafana bungles place the body’s credibility on the line
As Nasrec heats up, residents of nearby Soweto hope for an ANC that will do better
Salim Essa has sold his 60% stake in Trillian Capital Partners to CEO Eric Wood, now majority shareholder.
With a history of allegations stacked up against it, Trillian has become one of the firms at the heart of state capture.
‘Patently false and dishonest’: A new report blows open Trillian state capture case and a last-gasp bid to halt its release by ousting Tokyo Sexwale
Nonexecutive chair Tokyo Sexwale released the report on, among other things, claims that Trillion irregularly scored millions from state contracts.
A trio of companies “paid” R235-million towards the Guptas’ bill for Optimum Coal.
Sexwale is planning an investigation into allegations that Trillian staff had pre-knowledge that President Zuma was going to replace Nhlanhla Nene.
A self-confessed fixer claims he passed on money to secure mining rights in many African countries