The Daily Friend Show SA Institute of Race Relations
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The Daily Friend Show is a 30-minute current affairs podcast featuring our analysts and writers. It presents a liberal perspective on the political, social and economic issues of the day on Monday and Friday.
The Daily Friend Wrap is a 10-minute show that rounds up the news events of the day 3 times a week Tuesday to Thursday.
No topic is taboo, nothing is off-limits. Our team of analysts and writers from South Africa's fastest-growing liberal news site - dailyfriend.co.za.
#InNoUncertainTerms
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Zuma can’t be MK’s MP
Today's Daily Friend Show with Nicholas Lorimer, John Endres and Sara Gon. They discuss the constitutional court ruling that Jacob Zuma is not allowed to stand for parliament in the 2024 elections. They also chat about the real human cost of South Africa's unemployment crisis and the death of the president of Iran.
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Universal basic income isn't going to work in South Africa.
Today's Daily Friend Show with John Endres, Nicholas Lorimer and Terence Corrigan. They discuss the prospects of a Universal Basic Income (UBI) in South Africa. They also chat about NHI and immigration.
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The police who were abandoned | Daily Friend Wrap
Sara Gon and Nicholas Lorimer, discuss a town in the Eastern Cape where the traffic cops say they have been abandoned by their superiors. They also discuss the passage of the NHI bill and they discuss MKs appeal outside of KZN.
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"Only the ANC can save you" | Daily Friend Wrap
Nicholas Lorimer and Marius Roodt discuss a recent campaign pitch by President Ramaphosa. They also discuss electoral reform and race in cricket.
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Your healthcare is now at risk | Daily Friend Wrap
Chris Hattingh and Nicholas Lorimer discuss the President's announcement that the National Health Insurance will be signed into law on Wednesday. They also discuss the latest unemployment figures and Thabo Mbeki no longer campaigning for the ANC.
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Eskom rising from the ashes?
Terence Corrigan and Michael Morris join Makone Maja to discuss Eskom’s significant improvement in energy capacity and the influence of the private sector in these gains. They comment the planning and bureaucratic recruitment failures of some of the Bus-Rapid Transport systems and conclude with mapping some of the potential outcomes in the much-preferred DA-ANC coalition scenario.