John Steenhuisen’s exit from the DA leadership race signals a shift towards a new generation, with front-runners like Geordin Hill-Lewis and Solly Msimanga emerging.

The contestation for leadership positions within the Democratic Alliance (DA) has not yet officially begun, but several key positions within the party are up for grabs — and a younger generation is likely to throw their hats into the ring.

DA leader John Steenhuisen on Wednesday announced that he would not stand for re-election as party leader at the DA’s elective congress in April. The formal application process for the elective congress opens on 27 February.

Here are some of the potential contenders for positions at the elective congress.

DA leader
Cape Town Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis (39) is the clear favourite.

Hill-Lewis’s political pedigree in the party puts him ahead in the race by miles. He formed the DA Students Organisation at the University of Cape Town and was Helen Zille’s chief of staff during her tenure as Western Cape premier.

Before becoming Cape Town’s youngest mayor, he was the DA’s youngest MP. He was also the party’s shadow minister for finance, and trade and industry, and is the party’s deputy leader in the Western Cape, where a large portion of DA supporters are based.

Hill-Lewis previously said he wouldn’t compete against his “dear friend” Steenhuisen for the top job. Following Steenhuisen’s announcement on Wednesday, that obstacle has been removed.

He is likely to contest for the party leadership on condition that he retains his position as mayor of Cape Town — following in the footsteps of Zille, who for two years led the DA while mayor of Cape Town. However, Hill-Lewis will face a trickier task as the DA is now part of the Government of National Unity and makes important decisions at Cabinet level.

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He is seen as the preferred candidate of Zille and party donors. He enjoys wide support in Cape Town, but has faced strident criticism over the city’s cost of housing.

In recent weeks, other names mentioned for the DA’s top job include Solly Msimanga and Chris Pappas.

DA Gauteng leader Solly Msimanga. (Photo: Gallo Images / Fani Mahuntsi)

Msimanga (45) has been the leader of the opposition in the Gauteng provincial legislature since 2019. He was born in Atteridgeville and worked at the Liberian and US embassies and the NGO Project Literacy before joining the DA, which he served in various roles in the Gauteng legislature between 2014 and 2016.

He rose to prominence as the DA’s mayoral candidate in Tshwane during the 2016 campaign, capitalising on the disarray within the local ANC. The DA secured 43% of the vote to the ANC’s 41% and formed a coalition with smaller parties and the EFF.

Msimanga’s tenure in office was marked by a couple of staffing controversies. He had to defend appointing a politically connected bodybuilder as an executive director in his office, and appointed a chief of staff without the required qualifications, who subsequently resigned when the issue came to light.

He resigned as mayor in 2019 before completing his term to focus on his campaign for Gauteng premier.

Pappas, the mayor of uMngeni Local Municipality in KwaZulu-Natal, is a dark horse. In December, he ruled out contesting for the DA’s top job, but his name is still being bandied about as a potential contender.

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