Civil society organisations have issued a critical scorecard on President Cyril Ramaphosa's 2026 State of the Nation Address promises. They highlight a lack of funding and structural reforms needed for issues like water, jobs and education. The assessment warns that without actionable steps, vulnerable communities in South Africa will not benefit.
Civil society groups have delivered a sobering evaluation of the promises outlined in President Cyril Ramaphosa's 2026 State of the Nation Address (Sona). According to a report by Lerato Mutsila, advocacy organisations point to significant shortcomings in the commitments related to water access, job creation and education improvements. These pledges, made amid the formal proceedings of the address, are described as ambitious but lacking the essential financial backing and institutional changes required to support South Africa's most at-risk populations.
The critique, titled 'Rhetoric vs reality', emphasises that the glitzy presentation of the Sona obscures the absence of concrete plans. Advocacy groups stress that true progress for vulnerable communities depends on tangible funding and reforms, not just declarations. This scorecard serves as a reminder of the ongoing challenges in translating national speeches into effective policies that address everyday hardships faced by citizens.