The Economic Freedom Fighters’ decision to redeploy Floyd Shivambu to Parliament was a carefully calculated damage-control exercise, according to party insiders who reveal the move aimed to prevent further embarrassment while maintaining party unity.
Multiple sources confirm the deputy president’s return to the parliamentary benches was engineered as a compromise solution after his leadership position became untenable. “This wasn’t a promotion – it was a soft landing,” one senior EFF member disclosed anonymously. The redeployment allowed Shivambu to retain political relevance while removing him from frontline leadership battles that had caused growing discomfort within the party.
Insiders describe intense behind-the-scenes negotiations about Shivambu’s future, with three distinct factions emerging: those demanding his complete removal, loyalists advocating for his retention in leadership, and pragmatists pushing for this middle-ground solution. The parliamentary redeployment emerged as the option that satisfied all camps – permitting Shivambu to save face while allowing the party to move forward.
Political analysts note the maneuver reflects Julius Malema’s signature leadership style: public toughness coupled with private pragmatism. “Malema needed to show strength externally while preventing a damaging internal rupture,” said political analyst Khaya Dlanga. “This solution achieves both – it sidelines Shivambu without humiliating him.”
The compromise carries significant implications for EFF dynamics. It establishes a precedent for handling senior figures who fall out of favor while maintaining the party’s combative public image. However, questions remain about Shivambu’s actual influence, with some suggesting his committee assignments will reveal whether this is genuine rehabilitation or graceful marginalization.
As Parliament resumes, observers will monitor whether Shivambu adopts a lower profile or attempts to reassert himself – a decision that could test the durability of this carefully constructed truce within South Africa’s most theatrical political party.