POLITICALLY AWEH: Brett Herron pulls back the curtain on power, housing and politics

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POLITICALLY AWEH: Brett Herron pulls back the curtain on power, housing and politics

Back in 2018, the former Cape Town mayoral committee member resigned in protest at the DA’s approach to affordable housing. Eight years later, the crisis has only deepened, and will be a defining issue of the 2026 Local Government Elections. Now Herron is back, and he wants to be mayor.

Back in 2018, the former Cape Town mayoral committee member resigned in protest at the DA’s approach to affordable housing. Eight years later, the crisis has only deepened, and will be a defining issue of the 2026 Local Government Elections. Now Herron is back, and he wants to be mayor.

In the latest episode of Politically Aweh, host KG Mokgadi sits down with former City of Cape Town Mayoral Committee member and current GOOD Party Secretary-General Brett Herron for a conversation that goes far beyond party politics.

As a former DA insider, Herron wasn’t watching from the sidelines. He was in the room where decisions were made, policies were crafted and political battles were fought. Now, he’s speaking openly about what he saw.

The conversation tackles some of the most contested issues in Cape Town politics today, from affordable housing and donor influence to crime, urban planning and growing inequality.

Herron argues that while Cape Town may excel at administration, audits and financial management, those successes mean little if the outcomes for ordinary residents remain unchanged. He points to the city’s housing crisis, where approximately 440,000 people are on the housing demand database while only 2,480 housing units are expected to be built this year.

Questioning why major housing promises have failed to materialise, Herron says: “The land has been released, but nothing’s been built. And there is a pipeline of social housing projects that are waiting for funding, and there’s no funding for them.”

He argues that political ideology, not a lack of land, is standing in the way of meaningful housing reform.

“Helen Zille told me when I was working on affordable housing projects in this area where we are now in Woodstock, Salt River. She told me no, using well-located land is over-subsidising the poor.”

The discussion also examines the controversial N2 wall project, which Herron believes reflects a deeper failure to address the root causes of crime and poverty.

“If they genuinely believe it’s about crime, then you need to solve the conditions in which people live.” He adds: “The solution to the hell run, as it’s called, the N2, is not to build a wall.”

Perhaps most controversially, Herron speaks openly about the role of political donors.

“I learned in the Democratic Alliance how much say they have. And it’s dangerous.”

Reflecting on his time in the DA, he recounts a meeting about affordable housing proposals, adding: “The funders questioned me about this land that I wanted to make available for affordable housing in Woodstock and Salt River.” H

#app#politics#government#election

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