The Dramatic Announcement in Durban
On April 15, 2026, in a press briefing in Durban, African National Congress (ANC) Secretary-General Fikile Mbalula unveiled a significant leadership reconfiguration in KwaZulu-Natal (KZN), the party's former stronghold. Mike Mabuyakhulu, a seasoned ANC veteran, was appointed as the new convenor of the Provincial Task Team (PTT), replacing Jeff Radebe. This move comes as the ANC scrambles to rebuild its organizational structures ahead of the crucial 2026 local government elections. Mbalula emphasized that the changes stem from a thorough evaluation of the province's needs, following the expiration of the previous PTT's term, which was established in February 2025.
The reshuffle is part of a broader strategy to accelerate organizational renewal, campaign preparations, and structure building in line with the ANC's national conference resolutions and election manifesto. Mbalula praised Radebe as a 'stalwart and veteran' but noted the necessity for fresh momentum, famously critiquing the prior team's pace as akin to a sluggish 'Toyota Tazz' rather than a high-performance vehicle. The new PTT is tasked with hitting the ground running, supported by full-time deployments of National Executive Committee (NEC) members across KZN regions.
Background: ANC's Steep Decline in KZN
KwaZulu-Natal has long been the ANC's electoral heartland, but the 2024 general elections delivered a devastating blow. The party plummeted from 54.22% in the 2019 provincial vote to just 16.74% in 2024, while uMkhonto weSizwe (MK) Party, founded by former president Jacob Zuma, surged to 45.35%. This seismic shift propelled MK to the top spot, with the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) at 18.88% and the Democratic Alliance (DA) at 7.86%. The ANC's collapse triggered the dissolution of the KZN Provincial Executive Committee (PEC) and the appointment of the initial PTT to stabilize and revitalize branches.
Factionalism, corruption scandals, and Zuma's enduring popularity among rural Zulu voters fueled the erosion. Zuma's expulsion from the ANC in 2024 for backing MK exacerbated internal rifts. The PTT's mandate included convening regional conferences and an elective provincial conference by November 2025, but delays persisted, prompting national intervention. For detailed 2024 results, see the Electoral Commission dashboard.
Profile: Jeff Radebe's Illustrious yet Controversial Tenure
Jeffrey Thamsanqa Radebe, born in 1953 in Cato Manor, Durban, embodies the ANC's struggle-era legacy. Joining the ANC underground in 1976 amid student uprisings, he underwent military training with uMkhonto weSizwe (MK) in Mozambique and Tanzania. Exiled, he studied law in Leipzig, earning an LLM in International Law. Post-1994, Radebe held key cabinet posts: Public Works and Justice under Mandela, Public Enterprises under Mbeki, Transport later, and Energy under Ramaphosa until 2022.
As KZN PTT convenor since February 2025, Radebe faced mounting criticism for sluggish progress in branch rebuilding and conference preparations. Despite attributing the 2024 loss to 'arrogance,' his leadership failed to reverse fortunes. Mbalula's reassignment signals a pivot, with Radebe's next role pending announcement. His departure underscores the ANC's urgency to inject dynamism into KZN operations.
Profile: Mike Mabuyakhulu Steps into the Spotlight
Michael 'Mike' Mabuyakhulu, a KZN ANC stalwart, brings provincial roots and experience. Serving as ANC KZN treasurer (1998-2008) and deputy chairperson, he facilitated 1980s negotiations between ANC and Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP). As MEC for Economic Development, Tourism, and Environmental Affairs (2009-2016), he championed investment but faced scrutiny over a R28 million North Sea Jazz Festival scandal. Arrested in 2016 on fraud, corruption, and money laundering charges, he was acquitted in 2023 under Section 174; the state appealed in 2025.
Previously PTT coordinator, Mabuyakhulu's elevation to convenor reflects trust in his grassroots networks. Mbalula urged the team to 'hit the ground running,' leveraging Mabuyakhulu's familiarity with KZN dynamics. His reinstatement post-acquittal highlights the ANC's renewal balancing act between loyalty and performance. More on his career via Wikipedia.
Photo by Hennie Stander on Unsplash
The New PTT Lineup: Key Appointments and Shifts
The reconfigured PTT features a six-member executive, with full membership and regional teams forthcoming. Convenor: Mike Mabuyakhulu. First deputy: Bongi Sithole-Moloi, ex-Cooperative Governance MEC. Second deputy: Siboniso Duma, current Transport and Human Settlements MEC. Coordinator: James Nxumalo, SACP leader and former eThekwini mayoral contender. Deputy coordinator: Siphesihle Mdaka/Mgaga, uMkhanyakude mayor. Fundraiser: Nomagugu Simelane, Health MEC, retained.
Outgoing: Weziwe Thusi and Nomusa Dube-Ncube (deputy structures coordinator). The slimmed-down team prioritizes gender balance, youth, geography, and discipline. Nxumalo's role aims to heal ANC-SACP ties amid the latter's independent election threats. Full details in EWN report.
Mandate and Action Plan: Hitting the Ground Running
The PTT's extended mandate halts elective conferences until post-2026 locals, focusing on branch audits, membership drives, candidate slates, and demarcation realignments. Supported by NEC deployments, organizers, and a bespoke programme of action, it targets eThekwini and rural strongholds. Weekend regional meetings will brief structures on special NEC resolutions, followed by alliance consultations (Cosatu, SACP, SANCO) and league engagements.
Mbalula stressed internal consolidation over coalitions: 'The ANC will not go to other political parties.' Top leaders will oversee Johannesburg then return to KZN, ensuring rapid execution. This 'root and branch' rebuild draws from data-driven assessments to counter MK's momentum.
Stakeholder Reactions: Mixed Signals
Reactions remain nascent, but X (formerly Twitter) buzz highlights divides. Some praise the 'strategic reset' for injecting energy, while Radebe critics decry his appointment as mismatched. ANC KZN members rallied behind the duo pre-shake-up, questioning national oversight. SACP welcomes Nxumalo, signaling alliance mending. Opposition like MK mocks it as 'musical chairs,' predicting no revival.
Mbalula dismissed distortions, promising a Johannesburg briefing. Alliance partners await consultations. Analysts view it as pragmatic, but success hinges on delivery amid economic woes and voter apathy.
Implications for 2026 Local Government Elections
With locals looming, KZN's 2026 polls pit ANC against MK's dominance, IFP resurgence, and DA gains. No outright majorities loom, favoring coalitions. ANC aims 30-35% via rebuilt structures, targeting metros like eThekwini (lost council control). Failure risks further erosion, bolstering MK's narrative of ANC betrayal.
Success could stabilize Ramaphosa's GNU nationally. Voter turnout (58% in 2024 KZN) and youth disillusionment challenge all. PTT's focus on door-to-door campaigns and manifesto delivery is pivotal.
Photo by Andrea Qoqonga on Unsplash
Broader ANC Renewal and National Context
This KZN overhaul mirrors national renewal post-2024 coalition government. Ramaphosa's GNU with DA/IFP demands electoral rebound. Similar PTTs in other provinces address branch decay. Mbalula's 'scientific' interventions promise accountability, contrasting past impunity.
Challenges persist: factionalism, funding shortages, Zuma's shadow. Yet, Mabuyakhulu's team blends experience with resolve, potentially halting decline.
Challenges Ahead and Future Outlook
Hurdles include MK defections, judicial delays on conferences, and economic pressures inflating service delivery protests. PTT must navigate gender/youth quotas while enforcing discipline. Optimism hinges on unified action; pessimists foresee more turmoil.
By 2026, a revitalized ANC KZN could reclaim ground, but only through tangible gains in jobs, housing, and anti-corruption. Watch for PTT's first 100 days as bellwether.
