It is useless to do so. [Applause.] [Interjections.]
You know, hon Trollip is my friend. [Interjections.]
Mhlekazi, musa ukukhulelwa ngumkhwa wokurhana ngoku kuba ulapha eKapa. Usuke wathanda ukurhana gqitha ngoku. [Kwahlekwa.] Yonke into uyayibona ngokurhanela, iza kukwenzakalisa ke loo nto. [Kwahlekwa.] Andinqweneli ke ukuba wena ube njalo. Bakhona abantu abarhanayo apha, abathi behleli nje babe berhana ukuba ikhona into engalunganga. Abanye babo bahleli apha, kwaye sonke njengokuba sihleli nje bayasirhanela. Wena ubukade ungenjalo; musa ukuba njalo kuba ulapha eKapa. [Kwahlekwa.] (Translation of isiXhosa paragraph follows.)
[Sir, now that you are here in Cape Town, you seem to have become more suspicious. You seem to like being suspicious. [Laughter.] You are always suspicious of everything. Be careful! That will hurt you. [Laughter.] I do not wish that upon you. There are people who always suspect that something is wrong. Some of them are here right now, and they are suspicious of all of us as we are sitting with them here. You were not like them - do not be like that, simply because you are here. [Laughter.]]
This Chamber used to house the National Assembly - this one. Just think about it. This was the National Assembly of the country. It made decisions for all of us. Before we came here, there was a member of this House who ended up being called "Dr No" because he opposed everything. He said no to everything. We would read about it in the newspapers.
I don't want some of my friends here to become Dr Nos. [Interjections.] Yes, because you oppose everything. It is just fair to sometimes acknowledge the things that are happening, and then tell us to correct this or that. To just oppose everything ...
I have come to this point. The ANC has been magnanimous and very generous in victory, almost to a fault. Let me repeat that. The ANC has been very, very generous and magnanimous in victory. This is what the bulldog of British politics said.