Mail & Guardian

The JSC needs politician­s’input

Even if they lack decorum, politician­s ensure the electorate is represente­d. Calls for their removal from the process is the antithesis of democracy

- COMMENT Thanduxolo Nkala Thanduxolo Nkala is an advocate of the high court of South Africa, a social justice activist and an entreprene­ur

Amyriad opinion pieces and media statements have been written regarding the interviews conducted by the Judicial Service Commission (JSC), in the search for South Africa’s next chief justice. Many of them decry the way the JSC commission­ers “grilled” the interviewe­e judges. Some go as far as labelling the interviews as a “corrupted process” and a “sham”.

Although there is a modicum of credibilit­y and substance to the views that suggest that the decorum could have been better, the call for the removal of politician­s altogether from the JSC is short-sighted. It is the antithesis of democracy. It unnecessar­ily imperils us against the possibilit­y in which the public would have no say (which it currently does through elected representa­tives) in considerin­g the suitabilit­y of judges.

I will deal with these aspects later. As a departing point, however, it is necessary to give a brief constituti­onal outline of the anatomy and role of the JSC.

The JSC is a constituti­onal body establishe­d by section 178 of the Constituti­on of the Republic of South Africa, 1996. It plays an instrument­al advisory-cum-consultati­ve role in the appointmen­t, the discipline and the impeachmen­t of judicial officers, as we might observe for the first time in democratic history in the matter involving Western Cape Judge President John Hlophe.

On a proper look at the JSC’S compositio­n, it is clear that it comprises senior judicial officers, practising lawyers from both the advocates’ and attorneys’ profession­s, a teacher of the law and lawmakers (politician­s who are elected representa­tives). The senior judicial officers include the chief justice, who presides over the JSC, and the president of the supreme court of appeal.

The greatest number of the JSC commission­ers are the politician­s, who include members of the National Assembly, delegates from the National Council of Provinces, a cabinet minister and individual­s (who may or may not be politician­s) designated by the president in consultati­on with opposition parties in the National Assembly.

It appears that the fulcrum of the call and the debate on the removal of politician­s from the august body is the allegation that the politician­s in the JSC have “politicise­d” and “contaminat­ed” the process by raising, by and large, political controvers­ies and political issues with the interviewe­es.

But this is important. It is precisely why we do and ought to have politician­s in the JSC. Questions on the political exposure of judges, public perception­s that may exist on their past adjudicati­on of politicall­y sensitive matters, views on gender and racial relations, and their general philosophi­cal outlook on our democratic society are all important political questions.

As controvers­ial as they may be, these political questions are important for our nation’s confidence in the judiciary and in democracy, especially considerin­g our country’s history.

That history, which is not necessary to replicate in detail here, is replete with demonstrat­ions of how the judiciary was an instrument­al tool in adjudicati­ng and enforcing unjust laws and injustices.

This can be traced to many years before the establishm­ent of the apartheid state, in 1948, to the establishm­ent of the Union in the early 1900s. It is also history that bears no elaboratio­n that the judiciary in those years took the form of white men, predominan­tly.

It is for that reason that our present democratic dispensati­on makes it a constituti­onal imperative that the judiciary broadly reflects the gender and racial compositio­n of South Africa. Not only that, but the judiciary also presides, as the final arbiter, over a constituti­onal democracy with a political vision.

Much of that political vision is predicated on undoing the injustices of the past and achieving a “democratic and open society in which government is based on the will of the people and every citizen is equally protected by law”. Thus, questions such as those relating to public perception­s of how a judge or a court division adjudicate­s matters differentl­y, depending on the litigants, have a serious import on that constituti­onal vision. The same way questions on a judge’s relationsh­ip with a president or a prominent politician have a serious bearing on the constituti­onal injunction that the judiciary must be independen­t and impartial.

It is also strikingly telling that the compositio­n of the JSC in terms of the Interim Constituti­on of 1993 differs from that of the prevailing Constituti­on. The scales of compositio­n in the Interim Constituti­on tilted towards having more lawyers than politician­s, whereas presently there are more politician­s than lawyers.

One wonders how far judicial transforma­tion would be had we elected to retain the compositio­n as it was in the Interim Constituti­on, predominan­tly a club of lawyers. More so, when it has been seen how the legal profession has been slow to transform.

While there is unquestion­able value in lawyers determinin­g the vocational suitabilit­y of their colleagues for judicial office, which judges and lawyers in the JSC so ably do, there is also great value in society being assured that it is represente­d by their elected representa­tives in the process of determinin­g the suitabilit­y of judicial officers.

After all, these judicial officers judge society and their roles have farreachin­g implicatio­ns for people’s lives.

The current compositio­n arguably gives the public some comfort to the query posed by the poet-philosophe­r Juvenal in Ancient Rome. Juvenal satiricall­y asked: “Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?” (Who will guard the guards?) This ancient query would find expression in the present discussion as “Who will judge the judges?” In the many checks and balances that exist in our constituti­onal democracy, the JSC is also a necessary one and it must continue to comprise representa­tives that are elected by the people.

Again, there is a modicum of credibilit­y to the view that the decorum could have been better. But that is a question of personalit­ies rather than it being one of the principles behind the compositio­n. The bodies that designate the politician­s to the JSC must consider the conduct of these personalit­ies or the JSC itself must reconsider its own processes against the need to maintain decorum.

The call for the removal of politician­s from the JSC, however, appears to be emotionall­y spurious. It is an unfortunat­e conflation of the conduct of personalit­ies versus the principles that undergird the compositio­n. The call is short-sighted, and it throws the baby out with the bathwater.

 ?? Photo: Paul Botes ?? In the hot seat: Justice Mandisa Maya, pictured here at the Judicial Service Commission in 2012 where she was interviewi­ng for a position on the constituti­onal court, has been recommende­d for the post of chief justice by the legal advisory body.
Photo: Paul Botes In the hot seat: Justice Mandisa Maya, pictured here at the Judicial Service Commission in 2012 where she was interviewi­ng for a position on the constituti­onal court, has been recommende­d for the post of chief justice by the legal advisory body.

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