In moments of national transition and uncertainty, true leadership is tested β not when itβs easy to lead, but when itβs uncomfortable.
As concerns grow around the stability of South Africaβs Government of National Unity (GNU), a troubling pattern is emerging: key meetings are being postponed, reportedly to avoid politically sensitive discussions. This approach may buy time in the short term, but it risks long-term damage to the very foundation of the unity project.
Postponing difficult conversations is not leadership β itβs avoidance. And in a coalition as delicate and high-stakes as the GNU, every delay sends the wrong message: one of indecision, disunity, and eroding public trust.
South Africans didnβt vote for silence, sidestepping, or secrecy. They voted for solutions β and for leaders willing to sit at the table, even when the topics are hard, the stakes are high, and the outcomes are uncertain.
The reality is stark: if the GNU fails, we all feel the fallout β economically, socially, and politically. Its collapse would not just be a blow to governance but a signal to the world that South Africaβs leaders are incapable of rising above factionalism in the face of a national mandate for cooperation.
Itβs time for those in power to remember: real unity isnβt built by dodging disagreements β itβs forged through them.