4 JULY 2025
Honourable House Chairperson,
Chairperson of the Portfolio Committee on Communications and Digital Technologies, Honourable Khusela Sangoni,
Deputy Minister in The Presidency, Mr Kenny Morolong,
Members of the Portfolio Committee on Communications and Digital Technologies,
Representatives of the Boards of MDDA and Brand SA and team GCIS,
Honourable members, and
Invited guests.
Allow me to start by joining President Cyril Ramaphosa and other South Africans in extending our condolences to the family, friends and comrades of our late 8th Deputy President, Mr DD Mabuza. Makalale ngo buhle nokuphumula.
House Chairperson,
When the Government Communication and Information System (GCIS) was established 27 years ago, on 18 May 1998, it said it would focus on six broad priorities:
” Establishing a coherent government communication system;
” Building a development information network to service grassroots needs;
” Developing an information strategy for multi-purpose communication centres;
” Building relations with the media as communication partners;
” Encouraging media diversity; and
” Improving the competencies of government communicators.
Encouraging media diversity
The GCIS of 1998 grew alongside the emergence, at that time, of Google as a dominant search engine. Hotmail was the key email platform. We had four terrestrial television channels, three of them operated by the SABC and one private channel, e.tv. M-Net was the only satellite offering. South Africa had around 1.2 million mobile phone users – and none of those phones could take photos, and WhatsApp only came along 11 years later.
We can all appreciate from this how much has changed in communications in 27 years, and there is a need for all of us to keep up with the rate of change. To make the point clearer, globally the print media which flourished in the pre-digital era period is facing survival challenges in an era of instant access to news through the use of smartphones and online news aggregators. Allow me to illustrate this point, in 2004, there were more than 600 print media titles compared to a handful that exit today and many of these are struggling to survive. Community newspapers operating in a constrained regulatory environment are not immune to this. Recently, we witnessed the closure of more than 50 independent newspapers, and the once mighty City Press now only exists in digital form.
This reality has impacted the ability of the MDDA to raise revenue from commercial print media and consequentially, its ability to support community newspapers. To mitigate this, I established a Print and Digital Media Transformation and Revitalisation Steering Committee of CEOs of the mainstream commercial media, community media, academia, OTT platforms to recommend how to revitalise community and commercial print media in a multi-channel and digital economy. The final report with recommendations from this committee is expected soon, whereafter we will review both the Strategic Plan and APP of the MDDA to ensure full implementation of the recommendations.
In the 6th Administration, we indicated the need for legislative amendments to the Electronic Communications Act (ECA) to bring up-to-date the legislative framework to support community media. The GCIS has commenced the work to review Chapters 3 (Licensing Framework) and 9 (Broadcasting Services) of the ECA in earnest and should be able to complete consultations with the Department of Communications and Digital Technologies, the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa and other relevant stakeholders by end of the current financial year.
G20
As South Africa continues its historic role of the G20 Presidency in 2025, the GCIS, Brand SA and DIRCO have intensified efforts to protect and promote the country’s image in a world marked by rising geopolitical tensions and misinformation; and growing alternative narratives continue to compete with facts.
In this context, GCIS and Brand SA’s priorities are focused on:
- Targeted global campaigns that showcase South Africa’s leadership in key sectors;
- Robust stakeholder engagement to deepen collaboration across public, private, and regional actors;
- Strengthening social cohesion through the Play Your Part programme, which inspires active citizenship and community pride;
- Coordinated messaging by Team South Africa at global forums to ensure one clear, credible voice is heard; and
- Proactive media engagement to ensure South Africa’s story is told truthfully, responsibly and in ways that inspire confidence both domestically and abroad.
Deputy Minister Morolong yesterday led Brand SA and DIRCO in the launch of the G20 advert to announce our G20 Presidency and welcome global delegates. The advert profiles the attractiveness of the nation brand whilst reaffirming its position of being a stable and diversified economy. The advert uses powerful visual storytelling to deepen engagement, shift perception and reaffirm our voice on the global stage.
Anchored in the theme “Shared and Unified Prosperity through Sustainable Partnerships”, the advert captures the spirit, pride and purpose behind our leadership role.
Re-establishing a coherent government communication system
House Chairperson,
As the 7th Administration began its focus on the MTDP priorities of Economic Growth, Reducing Poverty and Building an Ethical and Capable State, the GCIS began its development of the 7th Administration’s National Communication Strategic Framework (NCSF).
This framework approved by Cabinet, creates a clear structure and outlook for effective and coordinated communication by government communicators over the next five years. The GCIS will work to support the priorities of government through the implementation of the framework that seeks to bring government closer to citizens and stakeholders, and envisions an increase in the levels of trust between government and the citizens, based on improved information-sharing about government performance and interventions.
To this end, 11 post-Cabinet media briefings reported on Cabinet deliberations and decisions, and 78 departmental media briefings were facilitated by the GCIS at either its Pretoria or Cape Town media centres – this translates to about two media briefings per week – repositioning GCIS as the coordinator of government communication. These media briefings, including the post-Cabinet briefings are supported by live streaming, which extends our international reach and access to rural communities through community radios.
During the 2025/26 financial year, the GCIS commenced in earnest with coordinating pre- and/or post- departmental Budget Vote media briefings, and the same will be done during the tabling of Annual Performance Reports in October.
In addition, and as part of GCIS’s focus on monitoring the implementation of departmental and provincial communication plans, we will table to Cabinet on a quarterly basis, communication plans implementation with an aim of identifying areas for improvement and support requirements for departmental and provincial implementation. The first report will be tabled in the next Cabinet. We intend to share these quarterly reports with the Portfolio Committee as part of enhancing its oversight on the implementation of the NCSF.
Additionally, also within this financial year, GCIS provincial offices will commence with coordinating the communication plans of district and metro municipalities in consultation with Offices of the Premier and SALGA.
At a policy level, we are at the final consultation stages in the review of the Government Communication Policy of 2018. The draft reviewed policy proposes:
- Norms and standards to professionalise communication and ensure coherence and a well functioning system across all spheres of government including entities;
- Prescribing that 1% – 5% of departments’ operational (excluding salaries and transfers) budgets be allocated to communication, thus making allocation of budgets for communication compulsory, also within this financial year to make it proactive and intentional;
- 30% of departments’ advertising budgets be set aside for spending on community media;
- Clarifying roles and responsibilities of various key government communication messengers such as Executives Authorities, Accounting Officers, subject experts, DDGs, Heads of Communication and Media Liaison Officers to close the communication gap that emerges from time to time due to personalities;
- Making media training of MLOs, Executive Authorities and newly appointed Heads of Comms compulsory;
- Providing clear guidelines for government social media communication; and
- Correcting the application of Corporate identity.
Building relations with the media as communication partners
The GCIS operates in a global environment where traditional news media -TV, radio and online – are supplemented, but at times, also undermined by institutional or individual content creators who seek to cause mischief or drive divisions and cynicism in society.
In a world where anyone can see anything happening anywhere at any given time, content development at the GCIS has to be globally competitive, compelling and credible.
These are the demands placed on the GCIS at head office and in remote corners of our country, where government communicators are reaching out to communities as well as visitors and investors who have an interest or economic interests in such areas.
Under these circumstances, the GCIS continues to place a premium on engaging with trusted news channels across all media types, given their credibility and expansive reach. In this regard, during the 2024/25 financial year, there were 61 engagements on government’s key programmes undertaken between government officials and senior journalists.
Building a development information network to service grassroots needs
Honourable members,
The GCIS continues to monitor national and international print, broadcast and online media, which ensures that government is kept abreast of issues and dynamics in the public discourse about our government and South Africa in general.
Over the period, social media alerts played a key role in addressing disinformation and misinformation. These platforms are growing in importance and usability as instant, trusted sources of government information and news.
GCIS has also actively utilised digital media to reach citizens, thus harnessing the power and reach of social media in government communication. In October 2024, we celebrated the government’s Facebook page for garnering one million followers, having started at just over 200 000 in March 2023. To date, the government page following has reached 1.1 million. The recently introduced government WhatsApp channels have 1.4 million followers. We boost a combined following of almost 3,5million unique users across platforms. This is made possible because we are consistent in using government-owned platforms for up-to-date announcements on government initiatives, important news and opportunities.
FOLLOWING
X/Twitter: 854 500
Facebook: 1.1 million
WhatsApp channels: 1.4 million
Instagram: 65.9k
LinkedIn: 10k
TikTok: 67.7k
Improvements are however, still required to improve the performance of other government departments, provincial and local governments’ social media platforms to be instantaneous information sources specific to their departments, provinces and municipalities.
Furthermore, the South African Government News Agency, SAnews.gov.za, has become a valuable source of current news and information dedicated to government priorities, programmes and interventions for the country. In the last financial year, 3 617 stories on key government programmes and activities were published on SAnews, focussing on government interventions in key priority areas such as anti-corruption, the fight against gender-based violence and femicide, implementation of the economic reconstruction and recovery plan, combatting crime and the outlook of the country in general.
SAnews articles were re-published in mainstream media both internationally and the domestically, which gave added traction to government messages and supplemented media reporting on government’s extensive programmes and opportunities for citizens.
The GCIS continues to prioritise radio as a pervasive communication channel to reach South Africans in a language of their preference and to ensure that communities engage with government. In the last financial year, 1 086 radio products were used to inform citizens through differentiated formats.
2025/26 and MTEF budget allocation
Honourable members,
Before I turn to the budget allocation for the GCIS, allow me to list other initiatives in our pipeline that the Deputy Minister and I have not detailed in this budget debate due to time constraints. These include:
- Assessment of the contribution of Brand SA and the MDDA to national policy;
- Revision of the statutory form of Brand SA;
- Development and approval of the Digital Transformation Strategy;
- Publishing of the Annual Transformation Report to assess the state of transformation in the Media, Advertising and Communications sector; and
- Development and implementation of an integrated Platform Strategy to improve relevance in a multi-channel environment and increase reach.
I believe that these initiatives are crucial to gearing up the GCIS and its entities for the communication landscape of the future.
Honourable House Chairperson,
The total budget allocation to the GCIS over the 2025 MTEF period (2025/26 to 2027/28 financial years) amounts to R2.468 billion which is spread as follows:
- 2025/26: R820. 281 million
- 2026/27: R805. 731 million
- 2027/28: R842.171 million
The department’s current budget of R820. 281 million for the 2025/26 financial year is shared across operational costs, capital costs, and transfers and subsidies as follows:
An operating budget of R544. 492 million, which constitutes 66% of the budget allocation. The operating budget caters for Compensation of Employees (CoE) to the value of R311. 080 million for establishment of 500 permanent positions and goods and services to the value of R233. 412 million.
It must be noted that the GCIS establishment is not fully funded as the CoE allocation is insufficient and had to fund cost of living adjustments estimated at R13.265 million.
Transfers and subsidies of R270. 711 million constitute 33% of the total budget allocation. Included in the transfers and subsidies allocation is a R40. 296 million allocation for MDDA and R229. 072 million allocation for Brand SA.
Included in the Brand SA allocation is R21.340 million allocation for communication around the G20 Presidency.
Honourable Chairperson, as much as we appreciate this financial injection from the fiscus, I must highlight that GCIS of the future requires an extensive capital budget to accelerate digital transformation technologies and ensure that the department remains relevant, agile and productive as the Fourth Industrial Revolution rolls into the fifth.
The budget reductions implemented by National Treasury over the 2024 MTEF period and budget growth that is below CPI, could potentially lead to significant adverse consequences such as operational compromises, stagnant innovation and diminished competitive edge.
In an era of ever diminishing budgets and many pressing interests, we understand funding is a challenge for all departments.
However, the present GCIS budget allocation does not adequately cover the cost to communicate (per capita) on different platforms and different languages so that we can reach all segments of the population.
Honourable members,
I table this budget for your support, and I undertake that we will use it diligently to serve the nation.
I say this particularly in view of the fact that, as South Africa prepares to hold a National Dialogue, the GCIS and its agencies stand ready to ensure South Africans have access to information that will enable their effective participation and feedback.
I look forward to working with the Portfolio Committee on Communications and Digital Technologies, as we seek to find innovative ways to enrich the lives of our citizens through communication.
I wish to thank Deputy Minister Morolong, the GCIS Acting DG, Nomonde Mnukwa and the leadership and staff of the GCIS and its entities for their continued commitment to ensuring that South Africans are empowered through a GCIS that works for all.
In closing, I wish to borrow from the words of Robert Ricciardelli when he said, and I quote, “In this world, there is enough light for people to see the truth, and enough darkness to blind those who aren’t seeking it.”
Enkosi, Ngiyabonga, Ndo Livhuwa.