The uMkhonto weSizwe (MK) Party just officially announced their three senior figures heading to the National Assembly’s impeachment committee, and this is a major move that signals they’re ready to play a serious role in one of Parliament’s most high-stakes processes!
The MK Party’s delegation is being led by John Hlophe, with Chief Whip Mmabatho Mokoena-Zondi and MP Khanyisile Litchfield-Tshabalala rounding out the team. The party announced it through their official X platform, making it clear they’re stepping into the impeachment proceedings with some serious firepower.
Hlophe’s placement immediately puts one of the MK Party’s most recognizable parliamentary figures front and centre in this process. As the party’s First Deputy President and parliamentary leader, he’s been a dominant voice in debates about governance, constitutional issues, and executive accountability. Having him lead the delegation shows the MK Party is treating this seriously.
[MEDIA STATEMENT]: MK PARTY ANNOUNCES ITS DEPLOYEES TO THE IMPEACHMENT COMMITTEE AS ANNOUNCED BY THE SPEAKER OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY. pic.twitter.com/mnNvjijw3y
— MK Party in Parliament (@MKParliament) May 19, 2026
Mokoena-Zondi’s deployment strengthens the party’s parliamentary team even more. The MK Party recently elevated her to the influential Chief Whip position after she served in the National Council of Provinces. Party leadership has praised her for her discipline, organizational leadership, and commitment to pushing the MK Party’s parliamentary agenda. She’s clearly someone they trust to handle high-pressure situations.
Litchfield-Tshabalala completes the three-member team that the MK Party believes will firmly represent their position during the committee’s work.
The impeachment committee has already grabbed national political attention, with opposition parties ramping up pressure inside Parliament. Recent tensions in the National Assembly have seen MK Party MPs openly challenging proceedings involving President Cyril Ramaphosa, arguing that impeachment-related concerns can’t be ignored. So this deployment shows the MK Party is doubling down on their involvement in accountability issues.
Political analysts are expecting the committee’s work to become one of the most closely watched parliamentary developments in the coming weeks. Parties are positioning themselves strategically ahead of key debates on accountability and governance, and the MK Party’s move shows they want to be right in the middle of those conversations.
The MK Party said their three deployees are ready to execute their responsibilities in line with the party’s constitutional and political mandate within Parliament. Translation: they’re prepared to push their agenda hard during these proceedings.
So here’s what everyone’s wondering: will the MK Party use this committee position to genuinely hold the government accountable, or are they using it as a platform to advance their own political interests?
