The Foundation for Rights of Expression and Equality (FREE SA) notes with regret and concern that the prevailing theme of the 2026 State of the Nation Address (SONA) is the further centralisation of executive authority, rather than the structural reform and institutional renewal South Africa urgently requires.
While the Address emphasised greater presidential and national oversight across a range of crises – from crime and policing to water delivery, infrastructure collapse and firearm ownership – it failed to confront the deeper systemic and policy failures that have produced the crises our country faces in the first place.
Free SA spokesperson Gideon Joubert reacted “The underlying premise of the 2026 SONA appears to be that intensified national executive involvement, coupled with the appointment of “the right people,” will resolve South Africa’s governance failures.”
This approach is both naïve and suggesting otherwise is purely performative politics.
Absent meaningful policy reform – including depoliticisation of the public service, competitive procurement reform, regulatory simplification, and real accountability mechanisms – additional oversight risks becoming little more than symbolic central control.
South Africa’s crisis is not one of insufficient central authority. It is a crisis of governance design and accountability. Over-centralisation has, in many instances, weakened local initiative, eroded municipal competence, and entrenched political interference in administrative functions. Expanding executive oversight without reforming the underlying systems that enable dysfunction will simply compound, rather than correct, the problem.
“South Africans deserve reform, not rhetoric.” Joubert concluded.