National Assembly: 2019–2024 In the
May 2019 general election, she was elected to the
National Assembly of South Africa and became the EFF's youngest
Member of Parliament. She was sworn in alongside other student activists, including
Peter Keetse,
Nompendulo Mkhatshwa and
Vuyani Pambo. She was a member of Parliament's
Portfolio Committee on Health. On 25 June 2019, she delivered her
maiden speech during the
State of the Nation Address debate. She was forced to withdraw a comment about the government being complicit in the murders of #FeesMustFall activists. In January 2022, she
trended on
Twitter for calling President
Cyril Ramaphosa "toothless" and a "weak little boy". From around 2020, Chirwa was subject to social media attacks from anonymous users who claimed without substantiation that she was a
Malawian national and that her family had fraudulently obtained
South African citizenship. In January 2022, she responded to the allegations by
tweeting: "You can lie to yourselves about my nationality until you turn green in the buttocks. It will not make your lies the truth and neither will it ever silence me. I didn't buy my voice. I'm not renting it either. Rest assured, I will always speak and there's nothing you can do about it." In March 2024, Chirwa was absent from a parliamentary vote in order to care for her unwell child. The EFF fined her and instructed her to apologise. Shortly afterwards, the EFF released its list of candidates for the
upcoming general election, which listed Chirwa in last place. EFF leader
Julius Malema said that her demotion was the result of a democratic party process.
National Council of Provinces: June 2024–January 2025 In the May 2024 general election, Chirwa was elected to represent the EFF in the
Gauteng delegation to the
National Council of Provinces, the upper house of the South African Parliament. She was sworn in to her seat on 15 June 2024. ==Personal life==