The Constitutional Court has delivered a decisive ruling against the uMkhonto weSizwe (MK) Party and its controversial MP John Hlophe, dismissing their urgent bid to lift an interim ban preventing the impeached former judge from serving on the Judicial Service Commission (JSC).
In a unanimous decision, the apex court refused to hear a direct appeal, effectively upholding the Western Cape High Court’s September 2024 interim interdict. The ruling maintains Hlophe’s exclusion from JSC proceedings pending the final determination of a judicial review into his parliamentary appointment to the powerful judicial oversight body.
The legal battle stems from Hlophe’s 2023 impeachment as Western Cape Judge President for gross misconduct – a historic first in South Africa’s democratic era. Despite this, the MK Party nominated him to the JSC, which screens judicial candidates and handles complaints against judges. This move sparked immediate backlash, with the DA, Freedom Under Law and Corruption Watch successfully securing the interim block.
Legal experts have welcomed the Constitutional Court’s stance. “This reinforces the fundamental principle that those who’ve breached judicial ethics cannot be gatekeepers of the judiciary,” said constitutional law professor Pierre de Vos. “The court has protected the judiciary’s credibility at a critical moment.”
The MK Party has condemned the decision as “politically motivated,” with spokesperson Nhlamulo Ndhlela alleging: “This is part of a broader campaign to marginalize radical transformation voices.” The party maintains Hlophe’s parliamentary appointment to the JSC was procedurally sound.
With the High Court’s judicial review of Hlophe’s JSC eligibility still pending, the interim ban remains in force indefinitely. Political analysts suggest the case has become a litmus test for judicial independence under South Africa’s coalition government, particularly regarding parliamentary appointments to key state institutions.
The Constitutional Court’s refusal to fast-track the appeal signals its preference for allowing the ordinary judicial process to run its course, setting a significant precedent for how similar cases involving impeached officials might be handled in future. As the legal saga continues, it keeps spotlighting tensions between political appointments and judicial accountability in South Africa’s evolving democracy.