Following the chaotic failed motion of no confidence against Premier Thami Ntuli on 15 December 2025—as detailed in the first article of this series—KwaZulu-Natal Social Development MEC Mbali Shinga emerged as the pivotal figure. Her vote preserved the Government of Provincial Unity's majority, despite internal NFP turmoil and personal threats.
Mbali Shinga, the National Freedom Party's (NFP) sole representative in the 80-seat KwaZulu-Natal legislature, cast the vote that doomed uMkhonto weSizwe's (MK) bid to topple the Government of Provincial Unity (GPU). With MK (37 seats) temporarily allied to the EFF (2 seats), the coalition's 41-seat majority held by one vote, including support from the IFP, ANC, DA, and NFP.
The disruptions, including shouting, jostling, water spraying, and police intervention—leading to the suspension without pay of 36 MK members (currently challenged)—left a trail of 'disgusting behaviour,' as Shinga described, exacerbated by former president Jacob Zuma's pre-vote appearance.
Shinga, 51, from Mtwalume on the KZN South Coast, openly defied NFP president Ivan Barnes, who had unauthorizedly aligned with MK. 'And I was supposed to work with those people (MK)!', she told Daily Maverick, emotional during the interview. Now under 24-hour police protection due to threats, Shinga framed her decision as standing for 'justice and precedent' and women's emancipation amid South Africa's gender-based violence crisis. IFP's Mkhuleko Hlengwa called attacks on female leaders an 'assault on democracy.'
Aftermath saw Barnes suspend Shinga, which she contested as irregular; the legislature rejected NFP's unconstitutional recall bid. The NFP, a kingmaker with 19,548 votes in the 2024 KZN elections despite national obscurity, remains deeply factionalized. Shinga's stand underscores volatile politics in a province managing a R150-billion budget.