Mayor of Cape Town
Mayor of Cape Town | |
---|---|
Style | The Honourable |
Appointer | Cape Town City Council |
Term length | Five years |
Inaugural holder | Michiel van Breda |
Formation | 1840 |
Website | Official Website |
The Mayor of Cape Town is the head of the local government of Cape Town, South Africa; currently that government takes the form of the City of Cape Town Metropolitan Municipality. In the past, the position of Mayor has varied between that of an executive mayor actively governing the city and that of a figurehead mayor with a mostly ceremonial role. The current Mayor is Patricia de Lille.
Current Office
This is a list of Mayors of Cape Town in South Africa:
City of Cape Town (December 2000 - Present)
Name | Term of office | Political party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Peter Marais | December 2000 | November 2001 | New National Party | |
Gerald Morkel | November 2001 | October 2002 | New National Party | |
Nomaindia Mfeketo | October 2002 | March 2006 | African National Congress | |
Helen Zille | March 2006 | April 2009 | Democratic Alliance | |
Dan Plato | May 2009 | May 2011 | Democratic Alliance | |
Patricia de Lille | June 2011 | Incumbent | Democratic Alliance |
Historic Offices
Metropolitan Local Councils (June 1996 - December 2000)
Cape Metropolitan Council (CMC)
- Attie Adriaanse (2000)[1] (NNP)
- Rev William Bantom (1996 - 2000) [2] (NNP)
City of Cape Town Municipality (Central Substructure)
- Nomaindia Mfeketo (1998 - 2000) (ANC)
- Theresa Solomons (1996 - 1998) (ANC)
City of Tygerberg Municipality (Tygerberg Substructure)
South Peninsula Municipality (Southern Substructure)
- John Oswald "OJ" Jacobs (1996 - 2000) (NNP)
Helderberg Municipality (Helderberg Substructure)
- Leon Deacon (1996 - 2000) (NNP)
Oostenberg Municipality (Eastern Substructure)
- Danny De La Cruz (1996 - 2000) (NNP)
Blaauwberg Municipality (Northern Substructure)
- Desmond Stoffberg (1999 - 2000) (NNP)
- Heather Maneveld (1997 - 1999) (NNP)
- Algene Ross (1996 - 1997) (NNP)
City of Cape Town Transitional Council (February 1995 - June 1996)
- Rev William Bantom (1995 - 1996) (NP)
City of Cape Town prior to introduction of multiracial democratic dispensation at local government level in February 1995
(Unless otherwise indicated, names are taken from the cumulative list of mayors published in the annual Mayor's Minutes)
- Patricia Kreiner (1993 - 1995)
- Clive Keegan (1993)
- Frank van der Velde (1991 - 1993)
- Gordon Oliver (1989 - 1991)[3][4]
- Peter Muller (1987 - 1989)
- Leon Markowitz (1985 - 1987)
- Sol Kreiner (1983 - 1985)
- M.J. van Zyl (1981 - 1983)
- Louis Kreiner (1979 - 1981)
- Edward Mauerberger (1977 - 1979)
- John Tyers (1975 - 1977)
- David Bloomberg (1973 - 1975)
- Richard Friedlander (1971 - 1973)
- Jan Dommisse (1969 - 1971)
- Gerald Ferry (1967 - 1969)
- Walter Gradner (1965 - 1967)
- William Peters (1963 - 1965)
- Alfred Honikman (1961 - 1963)
- Joyce Newton Thompson (1959 - 1961), first woman Mayor
- Colonel John Orville Billingham (1957 - 1959)
- Pieter Wolmarans (1955 - 1957)
- Arthur Keen (1953 - 1955)
- Fritz Sonnenberg (1951 - 1953)
- Charles Booth (1949 - 1951)
- Herbert Gearing (1947 - 1949)
- Abe Bloomberg (1945 - 1947)
- Ernest Nyman (1943 - 1945)
- Walter James (1941 - 1943)
- Wilfred Brinton (1939 - 1941)
- WC Foster (1937 - 1939)
- James Low (1935 - 1937)
- Louis Gradner (1933 - 1935)
- Henry Stephan (1931 - 1933)
- Rev Alfred Lewis (1929 - 1931)
- Andrew Reid (1927 - 1929)
- William Fish (1925 - 1927)
- Ryno J. Verster (1922 - 1925)
- William Gardener (1920 - 1922)
- William J. Thorne (1918 - 1920)
- Sir Harry Hands (1915 - 1918) (second term)
- John Parker (1913 - 1915), first Mayor of "Greater" Cape Town after surrounding municipalities had been incorporated into the city
- Harry Hands (1912 - 1913) (first term) [5]
- Sir Frank Smith (1908 - 1912)
- William Duncan Baxter (1907 - 1908)[6]
- Hyman Liberman (1904 - 1907)
- Sir William Thorne (1901 - 1904)
- Thomas O'Reilly (1900 - 1901) (second term)
- Thomas Ball (1898 - 1900)
- Herman Boalch (1897 - 1898) (died in office)
- Sir John Woodhead (1896 - 1897) (fourth term)
- James Attwell (1895 - 1896)
- George Smart (1894 - 1895)
- John Woodhead (1893 - 1894) (third term)
- Johan Mocke (1892 - 1893)
- David Pieter de Villiers Graaff (1890 - 1892), later Minister of Public Works and Finance [7]
- David Christiaan de Waal (1889 - 1890)
- John Woodhead (1888 - 1889( (second term)
- Thomas O'Reilly (1887 - 1888) (first term)
- John Woodhead (1886 - 1887) (first term)
- Thomas James Campbell Inglesby (1885 - 1886), former honorary Colonel of Cape Field Artillery[8]
- Philip Stigant (1884 - 1885) (third term)
- Charles Lewis (1883 - 1884) (second term)
- William Fleming (1881 - 1883)
- Petrus Kotze (1879 - 1881)
- Jan Christiaan Hofmeyr (1878 - 1879)
- John Philip (1877 - 1878)
- Charles Lewis (1876 - 1877) (first term)
- P.U. Leibbrandt (1875 - 1876)
- Philip Stigant (1874 - 1875) (second term)
- Gillis J. de Korte (1872 - 1874) (third term)
- Philip Stigant (1871-1872) (first term)
- Gillis J. de Korte (1866 - 1871) (second term), title changed from "chairman" to "mayor" in 1867
- D.G. van Breda (1865 - 1866) (second term)
- Joseph Barry (1863 - 1865)
- Thomas Watson (1863)
- W. Herman (1862 - 1863)
- Gillis J. de Korte (1860 - 1862) (first term)
- D.G. van Breda (1860) (first term)
- Hercules Crosse Jarvis (1848 - 1860)
- J.J.L. Smuts (1844 - 1848)
- Michiel van Breda (1840 - 1844), first Chairman of the Cape Town Municipality[9]
See also
References
- ↑ "Successor to porn-watching mayor elected". Independent Newspapers. 27 September 2000.
- ↑ "Porn-watching mayor says sorry". Independent Newspapers. 12 September 2000.
- ↑ "Quotes about Cape Town mayoral system".
- ↑ "Great Guides - Roddy Bray".
- ↑ "Two Minutes of Silence and Poppies".
- ↑ "William Duncan Baxter".
- ↑ Union of South Africa
- ↑ Gunners of The Cape - Neil Orpen
- ↑ Bredasdorp
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/23/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.