Leadership turnover just cracked the DA wide open, forcing a reset that could reshape opposition politics and coalition math fast.
Steenhuisen steps aside
Steenhuisen steps aside
- John Steenhuisen plans to ditch another run for party leadership.
- His exit caps years of steering elections and coalition bargaining.
- That choice lands before the Federal Congress showdown.
- Pressure chatter frames this as a preemptive exit.
- The announcement lands during a Wednesday morning briefing.
- Durban hosts the moment tied to Steenhuisen’s political origin.
- Speculation swirls around succession and party direction.
- April’s elective gathering looms as the real battlefield.
- Internal voices pushed hard for fresh faces and energy.
- Donor grumbles targeted coalition stances and strategy calls.
- Steenhuisen’s focus has drifted toward Cabinet work.
- Avoiding a messy leadership brawl factored into the move.
- Steenhuisen stays put as Minister of Agriculture.
- His portfolio tackles livestock disease and farmer stress.
- Foot-and-mouth fallout remains a national headache.
- Cabinet duties outpaced party management demands.
- John Steenhuisen started local politics in Durban decades ago.
- Early work unfolded inside eThekwini Municipality.
- Parliament later saw him act as DA chief whip.
- A contested 2020 vote vaulted him to federal leader.
- The DA weathered the 2021 local contests.
- The 2024 national race delivered coalition leverage.
- The Government of national unity seats followed that result.
- Growth stalled beyond core voter blocs.
- Geordin Hill-Lewis draws buzz from Cape Town results.
- Solly Msimanga brings Gauteng roots and corruption rhetoric.
- Solly Malatsi pitches tech-forward governance instincts.
- Alan Winde offers crisis-tested provincial leadership.
- Supporters credit Steenhuisen with stabilizing rough years.
- Rivals mock the move as a weakness.
- The DA eyes youth appeal and a wider reach.
- Congress outcomes shape the 2026 local fight.