It comes down to this, no matter how big or glorious your promises sound. If there is no detailed plan on how you going to achieve them you should skip preaching period! Maybe we should look at the rallies as a presentation. A place where you sell us a dream and, we just require that while at it please add details, tell us how you plan to achieve what you promising us.
We have reached a time where it is important to have honest conversations with our leaders; such a time requires that we be realistic and honest. The practicality of promises made should also be questioned, congratulations on the success you have made in the past but that will never be a good reason why someone will put a cross next to your party name. All I am saying is not another job promise tell me the plan, let me evaluate if I believe the plan will work for me.
Job creation is a very sensitive issue, taking in to consideration the volatile unemployment situation in South Africa it makes sense why job creation is a selling point for all the parties but the question is, if they are sincere about serving the people and creating those jobs why is the problem still growing?
We have been subjected to ministers throwing shade at opposition party leaders all year long in parliament, we have heard all sorts of name calling and mocking, we kept quit and observed how MPs spent their day at the office so now tell me where they just pushing time till the next elections? Because if that is what they going back to after the elections then 03 august 2016 elections won’t result in anything tangible.