The MK party wants technical experts questioned over a two-hour interruption in the IEC's election results system, but the commission argues the case is another failed attempt to challenge the 2024 election outcome.
Nearly two years after alleging that the 2024 national election was rigged, the MK party has softened its court challenge, now focusing on a two-hour interruption in the Electoral Commission's (IEC) results system rather than directly seeking to have the election declared unfair.
Appearing in the Electoral Court on Wednesday, 17 June 2026, the party's legal team, led by advocate Thabani Masuku, argued that the court should hear oral evidence from technical experts about the circumstances surrounding the outage, which occurred while election results were being processed and displayed to the public.
This is rather a big shift from the party's initial response to the election outcome, when it accused the IEC of vote rigging and questioned the legitimacy of the results, despite getting millions of votes.
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In court, however, counsel repeatedly emphasised that the immediate issue was the integrity of the results system, not a declaration that the election itself was invalid.
Focus on the results system
"We accept that committed patriots would love to see an election being managed in a free and fair manner. But we say that if that system that they're using, that they have employed, if that system is compromised by their own conduct....
View original source — AllAfrica ↗

