How ActionSA’s Angela Sobey plans to capitalise on DA, ANC failures in Western Cape

Angela Sobey, ActionSA premier candidate, vows to bring authentic politics to Western Cape amid DA and ANC failures. Picture: Ayanda Ndamane/Independent Newspapers

Angela Sobey, ActionSA premier candidate, vows to bring authentic politics to Western Cape amid DA and ANC failures. Picture: Ayanda Ndamane/Independent Newspapers

Published Apr 6, 2024

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ActionSA Western Cape Cape Premier candidate Angela Sobey wants to show citizens that “an authentic brand of politics” exists despite the failures of the DA and the ANC.

In an interview with the “Cape Times” this week, she spoke about her plans to pick up from the failures of the so-called big parties.

When announcing her as the party's premier candidate, ActionSA leader Herman Mashaba said Sobey represented the calibre of leadership ActionSA sought to cultivate to fix South Africa and that she was what the people of the Western Cape needed to give a voice to those long-forgotten.

Sobey, who has served as a councillor in Johannesburg since 2021, said her journey into politics started when she was approached by Mashaba, who was looking for “ordinary citizens who felt strongly enough about issues to take a stand”.

A mother of two boys and identical twin girls, Sobey, 53, said before politics, being multilingual, she worked as an interpreter at the courts and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

Prior to Covid-19 Sobey said she was a management consultant, until the industry took a knock following state capture revelations.

“My journey into politics was brought out of necessity with everything that has been going on in this country. As ordinary citizens we experience the daily frustration that has become so normal. The high levels of unemployment, poverty, gender based violence and femicide, crime, and substance abuse.

“It’s one thing after another. The government is just insulting us as South Africans with all the money that gets stolen.

“You have a state of capture report gathering dust almost five years later, our institutions are collapsing, there is no rule of law, our economy is tanking, they have failed us dismally, so it has necessitated us to step in,” said Sobey.

Issues facing the province that were on her priority list to address included gangsterism, housing, unemployment and homelessness, among others which she said were interlinked.

“I am a mother, daughter, South African of mixed race. I am of Xhosa and Coloured descent. I was born in the Eastern Cape and raised between rural Eastern Cape and Manenberg,” she said.

Coming back to the Western Cape and going back to Manenberg, issues like apartheid legacy spatial planning stood out, as they did 30 years ago.

“There has been no appetite to address the living conditions of people that live 20, 30 kilometres out of town”.

“Those stairs in Helen court where I grew up as a child are so unstable.

Somebody that is not strong enough on their legs is expected to go up those unstable stairs and potentially fall.

But more than anything else, those environments breed unemployment.

“Textile and fishing industries have been destroyed over the last 30 years, which contributes to the unemployment of people living in those areas, in fishing villages that used to survive on fishing. Those fishing quotas have been handed out to the highest bidder, leaving these communities impoverished.

“It contributes to depression, mental health issues, and substance abuse.

The same communities are under siege because those that are manufacturing the drugs are living in suburbs and driving the nicest cars and benefiting from private security.

“Their target market is your communities that are living on the Cape Flats. They are busy destroying our very communities through selling drugs and turf wars.”

She claimed the province had the highest prevalence of gender-based-violence and femicide, as well as the highest prevalence of homelessness.

“These issues are interlinked and there cannot be a one size fits all approach.

“The apartheid legacy spatial planning goes to housing and an actual plan and the housing issue, and the extortion and gangs speak to the rule of law. Economic prosperity speaks to the creation of jobs and giving entrepreneurs finance and so on.”

“I believe that the failures of the Western Cape falls squarely on the shoulders of the DA and the ANC, because it’s a provincial and a national function.

“What needs to happen is politicians need to stop treating voters like voting cattle. We need to bring government to the people.”

Asked how they were being received by communities in the province during their campaign trail, Sobey said they felt they stood a good chance in the upcoming elections.

Cape Times