Today, ActionSA officially commenced its pre-voter registration mobilisation campaign in the Nkangala District Municipality in Mpumalanga ahead of the IEC voter registration weekend scheduled for 20–21 June 2026.
The campaign, which will continue across various provinces in the coming weeks, seeks to directly engage communities, encourage voter participation, and restore confidence in democratic participation among South Africans who have increasingly lost faith in government.
Today’s engagements in Nkangala once again exposed the painful reality that many communities continue to live through decades after the dawn of democracy. Residents expressed deep frustration over collapsing service delivery, unemployment, poverty, and a government that has become disconnected from the people it was elected to serve.
One of the most concerning discoveries during today’s engagements was the condition under which vulnerable members of society continue to live with little to no meaningful support from government institutions.
During the campaign, ActionSA Deputy President, we engaged with the owner of a care facility housing approximately 118 elderly residents, including both able-bodied residents and persons living with disabilities. The facility management expressed severe dissatisfaction with government’s continued failure to listen to the needs of communities and institutions caring for society’s most vulnerable.
According to the facility, politicians have repeatedly visited the centre during election periods over many years, making promises that have never materialised into action. Despite government being fully aware of the challenges facing the facility, including a lack of adequate resources and support necessary to ensure proper care and operational efficiency, little assistance has been provided.
The pain and frustration expressed by the facility reflects the lived reality of many South Africans who feel abandoned by a government that only remembers communities during elections.
At the same time, the engagement also revealed something important: hope.
The facility management expressed that the visible changes and governance improvements taking place in the City of Tshwane under the leadership of Executive Mayor Dr. Nasiphi Moya have restored their belief that ethical, decisive, and capable leadership can bring real change to communities.
They indicated that what they have witnessed in Tshwane gives them hope that ActionSA can expand that model of governance into communities across the country, particularly in areas that have long been neglected and forgotten.
South Africans are not asking for luxuries. They are asking for dignity. They are asking for a government that listens, a government that acts, and a government that prioritises people over politics.
As ActionSA, we firmly believe that the next five years will be among the most critical in South Africa’s democratic history. The choices South Africans make in the upcoming elections will determine whether the country continues on its current path of decline or whether we begin rebuilding communities through accountable and capable governance.
We therefore implore all South Africans to take ownership of the democratic process by ensuring that they are registered to vote. Registering to vote must become a collective national responsibility shared among families, neighbours, friends, and communities.
The power to change the direction of this country remains in the hands of its citizens.
ActionSA will continue engaging communities across the country in the coming weeks as part of our nationwide voter registration campaign to ensure that every South African understands the importance of participating in shaping the future of our nation.
ActionSA’s National Voter Registration Campaign Reveals Growing Voter Apathy Amid Government Failures
Today, ActionSA officially commenced its pre-voter registration mobilisation campaign in the Nkangala District Municipality in Mpumalanga ahead of the IEC voter registration weekend scheduled for 20–21 June 2026.
The campaign, which will continue across various provinces in the coming weeks, seeks to directly engage communities, encourage voter participation, and restore confidence in democratic participation among South Africans who have increasingly lost faith in government.
Today’s engagements in Nkangala once again exposed the painful reality that many communities continue to live through decades after the dawn of democracy. Residents expressed deep frustration over collapsing service delivery, unemployment, poverty, and a government that has become disconnected from the people it was elected to serve.
One of the most concerning discoveries during today’s engagements was the condition under which vulnerable members of society continue to live with little to no meaningful support from government institutions.
During the campaign, ActionSA Deputy President, we engaged with the owner of a care facility housing approximately 118 elderly residents, including both able-bodied residents and persons living with disabilities. The facility management expressed severe dissatisfaction with government’s continued failure to listen to the needs of communities and institutions caring for society’s most vulnerable.
According to the facility, politicians have repeatedly visited the centre during election periods over many years, making promises that have never materialised into action. Despite government being fully aware of the challenges facing the facility, including a lack of adequate resources and support necessary to ensure proper care and operational efficiency, little assistance has been provided.
The pain and frustration expressed by the facility reflects the lived reality of many South Africans who feel abandoned by a government that only remembers communities during elections.
At the same time, the engagement also revealed something important: hope.
The facility management expressed that the visible changes and governance improvements taking place in the City of Tshwane under the leadership of Executive Mayor Dr. Nasiphi Moya have restored their belief that ethical, decisive, and capable leadership can bring real change to communities.
They indicated that what they have witnessed in Tshwane gives them hope that ActionSA can expand that model of governance into communities across the country, particularly in areas that have long been neglected and forgotten.
South Africans are not asking for luxuries. They are asking for dignity. They are asking for a government that listens, a government that acts, and a government that prioritises people over politics.
As ActionSA, we firmly believe that the next five years will be among the most critical in South Africa’s democratic history. The choices South Africans make in the upcoming elections will determine whether the country continues on its current path of decline or whether we begin rebuilding communities through accountable and capable governance.
We therefore implore all South Africans to take ownership of the democratic process by ensuring that they are registered to vote. Registering to vote must become a collective national responsibility shared among families, neighbours, friends, and communities.
The power to change the direction of this country remains in the hands of its citizens.
ActionSA will continue engaging communities across the country in the coming weeks as part of our nationwide voter registration campaign to ensure that every South African understands the importance of participating in shaping the future of our nation.