By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Cape Town NewsCape Town News
  • Home
  • Western Cape News
    Western Cape NewsShow More
    Senior ANC Leader Quits For Patriotic Alliance As Western Cape Councillors Follow
    June 5, 2026
    Refugees and families gather at night in Cape Town, South Africa, amid ongoing challenges, highlight.
    Hundreds flee Overberg as South African anti-migrant mobs go door-to-door
    June 4, 2026
    Anti-Immigrant Unrest Spreads From Mossel Bay To Overberg As Families Flee
    June 3, 2026
    Western Cape Power Recovery Reaches 92% After Storm Damage
    June 2, 2026
    Mossel Bay Violence: Hundreds Sheltered As Police Monitor Tensions
    June 1, 2026
  • City News
    City NewsShow More
    Belhar Residents Threaten Court Action Over Housing Project On Promised School Site
    June 5, 2026
    Cape Town harbor with Table Mountain in the background, under cloudy skies.
    Cape Town’s R5 billion desalination project raises eyebrows over water costs
    June 4, 2026
    Large formation of uniformed police officers during a public event in Cape Town.
    City Proposes Bigger Tactical Policing Unit As Cape Town Crime Pressure Grows
    June 3, 2026
    Cape Town Drone Policing Expansion Puts Aerial Surveillance At Centre Of Safety Debate
    June 2, 2026
    Bolt Pulls Rooftop Ads From Cape Town After City Legal Notice
    June 2, 2026
  • Crime & Safety
    Crime & SafetyShow More
    Two Teens Arrested After Fatal Lavender Hill Stabbing
    June 5, 2026
    UPDATE: Two Suspects Arrested In Mozambique After Mossel Bay Couple Killed In Kruger
    June 5, 2026
    Road repair crew working on asphalt on Cape Town highway.
    Cape Town bribery sting over alleged R1.4 million offer
    June 4, 2026
    Welcome to Saldanha Bay on the West Coast of Cape Town, South Africa.
    Kidnapped Cape Town Businessman Rescued In Saldanha As Nine Suspects Arrested
    June 3, 2026
    Follow Up: Table View Vigil Honours Energy Consultant Killed In Café Shooting
    June 2, 2026
  • Business & Economy
    Business & EconomyShow More
    Western Cape Government wins economy innovation awards
    June 4, 2026
    Alvarez & Marsal Opens First African Office In Cape Town
    June 3, 2026
    Cape Town CTICC Stake Sale Plan Sparks Fight Over Public Assets
    June 1, 2026
    SANParks winter discounts open Cape getaways for June and July
    May 31, 2026
    Cape Town Informal Trading Bays Explained: Permits, Rules And Applications
    May 29, 2026
  • Property & Housing
    Property & HousingShow More
    Modern airport terminal with travelers and retail shops in Cape Town.
    Golden Acre revamp signals new era for Cape Town CBD landmark
    June 4, 2026
    353 On Main Public Comment Process Puts Sea Point Housing Future Back In Focus
    June 3, 2026
    Western Cape Leads Building Plan Surge As Property Sector Warns On Rates
    June 1, 2026
    Cape Town’s Semigration Story Faces A Gauteng Reality Check
    May 25, 2026
    What Western Cape Disaster Status Means For Property Owners, Insurance Claims And Businesses
    May 23, 2026
  • Events & Lifestyle
    Events & LifestyleShow More
    Makin’ Magic Brings Family Theatre And Young Magicians To Artscape This Weekend
    June 5, 2026
    Cosplayers taking a selfie at a Cape Town comic convention event.
    Comic Con Cape Town 2027 moves to bigger venue
    June 4, 2026
    Encounters Documentary Festival Returns To Cape Town With Global And Local Stories
    June 3, 2026
    What Joburgers Learn After Moving To Cape Town
    June 2, 2026
    Cape Town Burger Ranked Second Best In The World
    June 2, 2026
  • Money Market
  • Advertising
Reading: Cape Town Takes Procurement Powers To Court In Public Procurement Act Fight
Share
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
Cape Town NewsCape Town News
  • City News
  • Crime & Safety
  • Western Cape News
  • Business
  • Industry
  • Politics
  • Home
  • Western Cape News
  • City News
  • Crime & Safety
  • Business & Economy
  • Property & Housing
  • Events & Lifestyle
  • Money Market
  • Advertising
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Cape Town News > Blog > City News > Cape Town Takes Procurement Powers To Court In Public Procurement Act Fight
City News

Cape Town Takes Procurement Powers To Court In Public Procurement Act Fight

The City of Cape Town and the Western Cape Government are challenging the Public Procurement Act, warning that it could centralise key municipal systems and slow urgent service delivery.

Last updated: May 25, 2026 8:56 am
By
Cape Town News Desk
8 Min Read
Share
SHARE
Highlights
  • The City of Cape Town and Western Cape Government are challenging the Public Procurement Act in the Constitutional Court.
  • The Act places state procurement under a central office housed in National Treasury.
  • Cape Town says the law could slow urgent water, sanitation, electricity, waste and environmental repairs.
  • COSATU supports the Act, saying it can help fight corruption and support emerging businesses.

Cape Town is heading into a Constitutional Court battle over procurement powers, with the City warning that the Public Procurement Act could slow urgent service delivery, while COSATU argues that the law is needed to bring order, transparency and anti-corruption safeguards to public procurement.

Expanded Article Body

The City of Cape Town and the Western Cape Government are challenging the Public Procurement Act in the Constitutional Court, setting up a major legal fight over how far national government can go in reshaping the way municipalities buy goods, appoint suppliers and respond to urgent service delivery needs.

The case centres on the Public Procurement Act, which seeks to place state procurement under a central office housed in National Treasury. The law also sets guidelines for preferential procurement in line with broad-based black economic empowerment policies.

- Advertisement -

For Cape Town, the concern is not only about procurement reform, but about how the law may affect the practical work of local government. The City argues that municipalities could lose control over important parts of their own procurement systems, including accredited supplier databases and payment integration.

That matters because municipal procurement is directly linked to everyday services. When water pipes burst, electricity faults need urgent attention, sewer systems fail, waste systems require intervention or environmental damage must be addressed, the City says it must be able to act quickly.

Cape Town Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis said the City supports efforts to fight corruption, but believes the Act is constitutionally flawed and could create more red tape instead of better delivery.

According to the report, Hill-Lewis said the aim of overhauling procurement and fighting corruption is undermined by what he described as fatal flaws in public participation and the unlawful passing of the Public Procurement Act.

He also said the Act brings a raft of red tape that could slow delivery and amounts to constitutional overreach by national government into the local sphere.

- Advertisement -

The City’s argument is rooted in local government autonomy. Municipalities have constitutional responsibilities to deliver services directly to communities. Cape Town argues that if national systems delay approvals, appeals or procurement processes, the result could be slower service delivery on the ground.

Hill-Lewis warned that local government must be able to act swiftly to resolve urgent water, sanitation, electrical, waste and environmental issues. He said the Act could slow municipalities through a large new administrative burden and interference from other spheres of government.

The City has also raised concerns about public-private partnerships. According to Hill-Lewis, the new framework could make infrastructure investment more complex and time-consuming, which may affect the City’s ability to work with private partners on major projects.

- Advertisement -

The concerns listed by the City include the centralising of procurement through a Public Procurement Office, the risk of nationwide disruption if a central procurement system goes offline, limits on municipal deviation from procurement rules for urgent service delivery, and tender appeals that may hold up contracts while awards are reviewed.

The City and province also argue that Parliament did not properly consider all input made on the Bill, especially after amendments were made by the National Council of Provinces in 2023.

But COSATU has strongly defended the Act.

COSATU parliamentary spokesperson Matthew Parks said the federation is not convinced by the arguments placed before the Constitutional Court. He said the City and province may be putting the cart before the horse, and that their concerns should rather be addressed through engagement with National Treasury on the regulations.

Parks warned that the risk of the court action is that it could allow what he called the “wild west” of public procurement to continue.

COSATU supports the Public Procurement Act, particularly its stated objectives of supporting emerging small, medium and micro enterprises, historically disadvantaged communities and local businesses.

The trade federation says the Act can become an important tool in the fight against corruption, state capture and procurement abuse across the public sector, especially in state-owned enterprises and municipalities.

Parks said the intention of the Act is not to suffocate government with unnecessary red tape, but to create a single online procurement system that is transparent and effective against corruption.

That difference in position gives the case wider public importance.

On one side, the City of Cape Town and the Western Cape Government argue that the Act may weaken local government’s ability to respond quickly to service delivery needs. On the other side, COSATU argues that a more centralised and transparent procurement system could help clean up public spending and open opportunities for smaller and historically disadvantaged businesses.

The court battle will likely test the balance between national procurement reform and municipal independence.

For Capetonians, the issue may sound technical, but its effects could be practical. Procurement rules influence how quickly the City can appoint contractors, repair infrastructure, respond to urgent failures and implement service delivery projects.

If the City’s concerns are upheld, municipalities may retain greater control over supplier systems and emergency procurement processes. If the Act stands as passed, procurement across different spheres of government may move closer to a centralised system shaped by National Treasury and the new Public Procurement Office.

The Constitutional Court challenge will therefore not only decide a legal dispute. It will shape how public money is managed, how corruption is tackled, and how quickly municipalities can deliver services when something breaks.

AI Search Summary

The City of Cape Town and the Western Cape Government are challenging the Public Procurement Act in the Constitutional Court. The Act places state procurement under a central office housed in National Treasury and sets rules for preferential procurement. Cape Town Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis says the law could create red tape, slow urgent municipal service delivery and interfere with local government powers. COSATU supports the Act, saying it can help fight corruption, support emerging businesses and create a transparent procurement system. The case raises questions about the balance between national procurement reform, anti-corruption controls and municipal autonomy.

Source: IOL / Cape Argus – IOL / Cape Argus – Theolin Tembo.

Author

Cape Town News Desk

CTNews Desk is the editorial team behind Cape Town News, compiling verified local stories, reports, and updates across the Western Cape.

Total Views: 1
TAGGED:service deliveryGeordin Hill-LewisWestern Cape governmentCity of Cape TownNational TreasuryCOSATUPublic Procurement Act
Share This Article
Facebook LinkedIn Bluesky Email Print
ByCape Town News Desk
CTNews Desk is the editorial team behind Cape Town News, compiling verified local stories, reports, and updates across the Western Cape.
Previous Article Murders Fall In Western Cape, But Violence Remains Too High
Next Article Storm-Damaged Roads Remain Closed Across The Western Cape
Leave a Comment Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Stay Connected

FacebookLike
XFollow
PinterestPin
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TiktokFollow
LinkedInFollow
BlueskyFollow
- Advertisement -
Ad image

Latest News

Two Teens Arrested After Fatal Lavender Hill Stabbing
Crime & Safety
Makin’ Magic Brings Family Theatre And Young Magicians To Artscape This Weekend
Events & Lifestyle
Table Mountain BEAST Trail Run Brings Tough Mountain Racing To Cape Town
Sport
MyCiTi Fares May Rise From July As Diesel Costs Put Pressure On Cape Town Commuters
Traffic & Transport

You Might Also Like

Large formation of uniformed police officers during a public event in Cape Town.
City News

City Proposes Bigger Tactical Policing Unit As Cape Town Crime Pressure Grows

June 3, 2026
City News

Who’s Funding Cape Town’s R20bn Airport Boom As Two Major Aviation Projects Prepare For Take-Off?

May 15, 2026
City News

Belhar Residents Threaten Court Action Over Housing Project On Promised School Site

June 5, 2026
City News

Cape Town Flags Learner Tobacco And Vape Use As Growing Health Concern

June 2, 2026


Cape Town News is an independent digital newsroom delivering verified local reporting from across Cape Town and the Western Cape. Covering politics, city news, crime, traffic, sport, events, and weather.

Find Us on Socials

Quick Links

• About Us

• Contact Us

• Editorial Code

• Sponsorship

• Terms of Use

• Private Policy POPIA

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

© 2026 Cape Town News. Published by Lashmar Media (Pty) Ltd. All rights reserved.
Join Us!
Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss the latest Cape Town news...

Zero spam, Unsubscribe at any time.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?