There are political parties which parade themselves as representatives of the disadvantaged but you hardly hear their leaders raising parliamentary debates about the slow pace of service delivery.
Anyone absolving the IFP and its former leader from political killings from the mid-80s to just before our first democratic elections in 1994 is, sadly, too economical with the truth.
Cogta political heads in the province and nationally are also to blame because you hardly hear them voicing their concerns over prolonged delays in delivery of services by councils.
While political populists are busy telling whoever cares to listen about the so-called white monopoly capitalists, there is looming jobs bloodbath in the automobile industry.