The DA said what happened in the Western Cape, must now happen here in Gauteng.
“It is widely known, and accepted by the ANC, that e-tolls have been denying the poor access to jobs and have a detrimental effect on working class people, a fact which has now been recognised by the court,” said John Moodey, DA Gauteng provincial leader and MPL.
Moodey said the new e-toll dispensation is nothing but a red herring to force people to pay for an unjust and unfair system, and will continue to be met with public resistance in the years ahead.
“Instead, the entire project could have been financed through a small ring-fenced increase in the fuel levy from 2008, and in the process building up reserves for future upgrades to Gauteng’s highways.”
He said South Africa’s economic health depends on that of Gauteng, and e-tolls is a virus slowly eating away this province’s prospects for economic growth and job creation.
“If Gauteng fails, South Africa fails, and e-tolls is one burden too many.”