City of Ekurhuleni Mayor Nkosindiphile Xhakaza has welcomed the adoption of the metro’s 2026/27 budget, describing it as a victory for residents and service delivery.
The budget was approved on its fourth attempt, with 176 councillors voting in favour and 31 against.
Xhakaza says the budget received support from 15 of the 16 political parties represented in council following extensive consultations.
He says the approved budget will ensure continued and impactful service delivery when the new financial year begins on 1 July.
“This goes a long way really to ensure that there’s continued service delivery to our people, that is not just a service delivery, but it is impactful to our people. So, we want to report that out of the council, 16 political parties that are represented, we consulted widely and 15 political parties actually agreed that this budget is responsive.”
WATCH | MMC for Finance, Ald. Jongizizwe Dlabathi, unpacks key aspects of the Capital Budget approved by Council today.
Find out how the City’s investment plans will support infrastructure development, strengthen service delivery, and drive growth across #Ekurhuleni. pic.twitter.com/LhibTqlm04
— CITY OF EKURHULENI (@City_Ekurhuleni) June 23, 2026
The DA refused to rubber-stamp a budget not in Ekurhuleni residents’ best interests, securing changes including one of the lowest property rates increases in the country, stronger action on electricity theft, and tighter controls on wasteful spending.
A step toward a more… pic.twitter.com/mhY7Mjjv1w
— Democratic Alliance (@Our_DA) June 23, 2026
Ekurhuleni Metro council meeting
VF Plus obtains critical wins that allow budget support
Denise Janse van Rensburg
VF Plus councillor: Ekurhuleni Metro pic.twitter.com/BIK5dwOFEn— VF Plus | Gauteng (@VFplusGP) June 23, 2026
WATCH | MMC for Finance, Ald. Jongizizwe Dlabathi, unpacks key aspects of the Capital Budget approved by Council today.
The DA refused to rubber-stamp a budget not in Ekurhuleni residents’ best interests, securing changes including one of the lowest property rates increases in the country, stronger action on electricity theft, and tighter controls on wasteful spending.
Ekurhuleni Metro council meeting