Deputy Minister of State Security: 2019–2023 Pursuant to the
next general election in 2019, Kodwa was again elected to an ANC seat in the National Assembly. In addition, Ramaphosa – who was
re-elected as President of South Africa – appointed him as
Deputy Minister of State Security under Minister
Ayanda Dlodlo.
Sibongile Besani was therefore appointed to replace Kodwa as head of the ANC presidency. By then, Kodwa was viewed as "one of President Ramaphosa's most trusted lieutenants". Minister Dlodlo's messaging about the unrest was markedly more pacific.'''''' In the aftermath, in August 2021, Ramaphosa restructured the state security forces: the Ministry of State Security was absorbed into the Presidency, and responsibility for the
State Security Agency was designated to the
Minister in the Presidency.
Mondli Gungubele was appointed as that Minister, and Kodwa became Gungubele's deputy, retaining his state security portfolio.
Zondo Commission findings In 2021, Kodwa was summoned to testified before the
Zondo Commission, established to investigate allegations of
state capture during
Zuma's presidency. At the commission, he was questioned about his relationship to a private technology company, EOH, and its employees; in particular, Kodwa had received in 2015, and had not yet repaid, a
R1-million loan from a former EOH executive. According to the final report of the Zondo Commission, published in 2022, Kodwa was paid an aggregate amount of R1.68 million by EOH and related agents between 2014 and 2015. The head of the commission, Justice
Raymond Zondo, concluded in the commission's report that EOH executives had attempted to "induce [Kodwa] to interfere with procurement processes in the interests of EOH", but he also noted that there was no evidence of improprieties by Kodwa, given that he had been the ANC spokesman – not a public employee – at the time the payments were made. However, the commission recommended that EOH should be investigated and prosecuted for its role in
tender fraud and for its improper relationships with ANC politicians, including former Johannesburg Mayor
Geoff Makhubo. and was also re-elected to the National Working Committee. After the conference, he was appointed as the committee's deployee to
KwaZulu-Natal.
Minister of Sports, Arts and Culture: 2023–2024 Weeks after the 55th National Conference, on 6 March 2023, President Ramaphosa announced a cabinet reshuffle in which Kodwa was appointed as
Minister of Sports, Arts and Culture, replacing
Nathi Mthethwa. The reshuffle followed rumours that Fikile Mbalula had been lobbying for Kodwa to succeed him as
Minister of Transport, a more senior portfolio than Sports, Arts and Culture. == Corruption ==