Cape Referendum Party launch to be covered in an exclusive interview with Nigel Farage on GB News

by | Nov 9, 2023

Cape Independent news, Western Cape politics, Cape of Good Hope current affairs, conservative news South Africa, local autonomy Cape, decentralisation Western Cape, Cape conservative opinion, South Africa conservative media, Western Cape news, Cape Town politics, conservative Cape news, local governance Cape, Western Cape opinion articles, Cape autonomy movement, South Africa decentralisation news
The former Brexit Party leader is likely to give a massive boost to the movement, which has been embargoed from local news sites in recent months

SHARE POST:

✅ Link Copied

In a couple of hours, the Referendum Party will be officially launched, with an online press conference broadcast from their headquarters at the Old Tannery in Wellington. Phil Craig, formerly of the Cape Independence Advocacy Group (CIAG), has chosen to lead the party, which has a surprisingly young roster of candidates.

In most political parties in South Africa, candidates for office tend to be middle-aged or older, with the exception of the EFF and a few members of the DA. But out of the Referendum Party’s six main public faces, four are under 30.

Campaign launch will be at 10:30, streamed at this linked location, and this page will be updated to include the statements offered by party representatives.

The livestreamed event will take questions from journalists, though surprisingly, more attention is coming from foreign journalists than local sources, who have recently adopted a quiet policy of embargoing news related to the secession movement, including refusing to publish anything related to the recent polling results.

Nigel Farage of Brexit Party fame, will be hosting Phil Craig on his GB News channel at 21:30 CAT. This will likely put the Cape independence movement at the centre of the news cycle for the coming several months, and will make it impossible for local news to embargo without appearing to deliberately have done so.

While the previous attempt to mobilise a political party in service of Cape independence has failed, this is not unusual in secessionist movements. The UKIP party in the UK failed to achieve significant success in the UK elections, but their successors, the single-issue Brexit Party, swept the federal EU election polls and placed the group at the centre of the news cycle at a crucial moment to push through the results of the referendum campaign to leave the EU.

While other political parties on the offing in the coming national election are facing a declining ANC, for most voters there is little new on the table. All parties in South Africa can be sorted into Charterist (ANC, EFF, PAC), Liberal progressives (DA, COPE, ActionSA, BOSA etc) and ethnic/culturally focused groups (IFP, PA, MF, VF+).

Cape independence introduces for the first time a new political program which offers real historical change, and if it succeeds, South Africa will be transformed forever, for good or ill, in a remarkable and obvious way.

0 0 votes
Rate this article

Independent news and opinion from the Cape of Good Hope for readers who value good old common sense. We focus on what really matters in South Africa.

Interested in joining the movement? Find ways to get involved

GET NOTIFIED FOR NEW CONTENT

read more