Gerald Morkel
Gerald Morkel (born 2 February 1941[1]) is a former Mayor of Cape Town and Premier of the Western Cape province in South Africa. He later served as a member of the Cape Town City Council for the Democratic Alliance until his retirement from politics in 2011.[2]
He was elected on a Labour Party ticket to the coloureds-only House of Representatives in the Tricameral Parliament in 1984. He defected to the National Party by 1994, and was appointed the Western Cape leader of the renamed New National Party by 1998, when he became premier of the province after Hernus Kriel stepped down. In the 1999 election, no party obtained a majority in the Western Cape. The NNP formed a coalition with the smaller Democratic Party, with Morkel remaining as premier. In 2000, plans began to prepare an amalgamation of the two parties under the name Democratic Alliance.
However, in 2001, the NNP leadership pulled out of its co-operation with the DA and instead sought to form a partnership with the African National Congress. Morkel was deeply critical of this decision and attempted to turn the majority of the NNP against it. When this failed, he was forced to resign as premier.[3] Joining the DA, Morkel was then elected as mayor of Cape Town. He remained in office for less than a year, when the DA was ousted from power by an ANC-NNP coalition following the floor crossing period in October 2002. Morkel continued for a while as Western Cape provincial leader of the DA, but eventually stepped down due to his links to fraudster Jurgen Harksen.
He continued serving as a member of the City Council for Steenberg until 2011.
Family
Morkel has three sons: Garth, Kent and Craig. They are also politicians.
References
- 1941 births
- Living people
- Mayors of Cape Town
- Premiers of the Western Cape
- Cape Coloureds
- Members of the National Assembly of South Africa
- National Party (South Africa) politicians
- Democratic Alliance (South Africa) politicians
- Labour Party (South Africa, 1969) politicians
- Members of the House of Representatives of South Africa
- African mayor stubs
- South African politician stubs