Local Government MEC: 2004–2009 On 29 April 2004, following the
2004 general election, Premier
Mbhazima Shilowa appointed Mahlangu to the
Gauteng Executive Council as
Member of the Executive Council (MEC) for Local Government. She held that position until 2009 under Shilowa and his successor,
Paul Mashatile. While in the portfolio, she initiated "Operation Consolidate", a large programme of financial support to
municipalities which aimed to improve financial management systems at the municipal level. She also called for municipalities to cut services to any provincial or national government departments which defaulted on their rates and services. In 2008, the
Mail & Guardian reported that Mahlangu had pushed through a land deal which a forensic investigation found had been "irregular".
Jules Browde, then the Integrity Commissioner in the
Gauteng Provincial Legislature, investigated at the request of the opposition
Democratic Alliance; he found that the deal had been "perfectly legitimate".
Health and Social Development MEC: 2009–2010 Mahlangu was re-elected to her legislative seat in the
2009 general election and newly elected Premier
Nomvula Mokonyane moved her to a new portfolio as MEC for Health and Social Development. In June 2007 the Department of Health, Gauteng concluded a service level agreement with Baoki Consortium and 3P Consultants in terms of which 3P Consulting was obliged to establish a Project Management Unit for the department to set-up a Health Information System and Electronic Health Records for Gauteng hospitals and clinics. On 23 March 2009 the agreement was extended for a further three years by the then MEC of Health
Brian Hlongwa. Mahlangu Replaced Hlongwa as MEC of Health on 8 May 2009 after the National Elections, as part of Nomvula Mokonyane's first provincial cabinet. Shortly after Mahlangu conducted a review of projects and on 1 July 2009 she wrote a letter to 3P Consulting stating that the department was cancelling the extended agreement. According to Ms Mahlangu's affidavit this was ‘due to serious allegations of impropriety as well as irregularities in the award as well as the extension of the agreement’. There was extensive litigation between the parties and on 18 February 2010 the
South Gauteng High Court (Lamont J) granted a declaration that the services agreement between 3P Consulting and the department was validly concluded and extended. The department appealed the decision of the high court and failed, furthermore on 7 February 2011 the
Constitutional Court refused leave for a further appeal. On 13 October 2011, 3P Consulting instituted application proceedings against the department claiming payment of some R99 million excluding interest and costs. The proceedings were defended by the department and referred for trial. Before the trial 3P Consulting was placed in liquidation. Its claim against the department was its sole substantial asset. The liquidators applied for the appointment of a commissioner to investigate the company's affairs and to determine whether it should continue with the litigation against the department to recover the claim. In July 2014, The
National Prosecuting Authority applied to the South Gauteng High Court to place preservation orders on any claims that 3P Consulting and Baoki may have filed against the Department of Health Gauteng, effectively attaching such claims as proceeds of unlawful activities, following attaching of Hlongwa's luxury home. On 19 May 2010, Six premature babies (Initially reported as five) died of
diarrhea at the
Charlotte Maxeke Academic hospital in Johannesburg. Mahlangu acknowledged she should take some responsibility in the deaths, but refused to admit to any negligence on the part of the hospital or its staff. Professor Keith Bolton, who was also the head of paediatrics at Rahima Moosa Hospital, helped compile the report which concluded that this had been an unusual case. The families did not receive any compensation from the department. In September 2010, Mahlangu oversaw the process of closing 3 TB Hospitals in Gauteng Province, namely Charles Hurwitz TB Hospital in Soweto, Tshepong TB Hospital in Tshwane, and East Rand TB Hospital in Ekurhuleni. Mahlangu defended the closure of the Three Gauteng tuberculosis hospitals as necessary to save money and channel resources to where they are needed most, with approximately R3 Million forecast as savings per year.
Economic Development MEC: 2010–2012 After less than two years in the health portfolio, on 2 November 2010, Mahlangu was appointed MEC for Economic Development in a major
cabinet reshuffle by Premier Mokonyane. In 2012 she led the establishment of Township Enterprise Hubs in
Sebokeng;
Sharpville;
Kagiso;
Katlehong;
Winterveld, and
Tembisa. Each hubs were to provide Automotive cluster; Services cluster and Light manufacturing cluster. These hubs were later adopted with provincial government spending at least 5% of its R10-billion procurement budget for goods and services on township enterprises, by the end of 2015. Between 2011 and 2013, Mahlangu worked to introduce a Gauteng Liquor Regulations on Shebeen Licences, into the Gauteng Liquor Act, 2003. Under this regulatory framework, Sheeben permits would be replaced by Sheeben licenses issued and regulated by the Gauteng Liquor Board. The regulations were meant to discourage the trading of alcohol on Sundays and religious holidays, as well as prohibiting any shebeen or tavern from operating within 500 metres of a school or place of worship. The regulation received wide public acceptance, although some stakeholders resisted the regulation citing difficulty in enforcement. Some of the provisions of the regulation were later relaxed, including allowing for trade of liquor on Sunday. Mahlangu fired the board and its chair, Prince Mafojane, in 2012 when they questioned her decision to relocate from Bramley in the north of Johannesburg to the new Department of Economic Development building in Johannesburg City Centre. The members of the board took the matter to
the Supreme Court of Appeals South Africa and won the case on 27 May 2013. The court ruled that "she acted with an ulterior purpose, to pressurize the Board into accommodating, in a building owned by it, a commercial entity named by her", furthermore it ruled that the decision to terminate the membership of all the members of the Board set aside, and the court expressed displeasure at the high-handed manner in which MEC behaved".
Infrastructure Development MEC: 2012–2014 In another reshuffle, announced by Mokonyane on 16 July 2012, Mahlangu was moved from the Economic Development portfolio to the Infrastructure Development portfolio. In 2014, Premier Mokonyane, finance MEC
Mandla Nkomfe and infrastructure MEC Qedani Mahlangu, were cleared by the Gauteng legislature's privileges and ethics standing committee after the integrity commission investigated allegations of fraudulent expenditure against them. Mahlangu was ordered to pay back the R7309 she used to buy leather goods with her government-issue credit card in
Istanbul,
Turkey, during a visit in 2013.
Health MEC: 2014–2017 Mahlangu was re-elected to the provincial legislature in the
2014 general election, ranked ninth on the ANC's
party list. From January 2010 to the end of the 2014/15 financial year, the provincial department of health paid out about R544 million in damages and settlements relating to medical negligence cases. Mahlangu was instructed by Premier Makhura to look at a different mechanism of addressing medical negligence cases besides the court processes where the department had lost approximately 168 cases in the same period. Some of the medical negligence cases include, Security guards turning away patients from the clinics, leading to at least two deaths in 2015, and severe brain damage with
cerebral palsy, suffered by a baby boy where hospital staff allegedly failing to properly monitor him after birth in 2007.
Life Esidimeni scandal In 2015, Mahlangu announced her department's decision to terminate its contract with private hospital group Life Healthcare and its Life Esidimeni psychiatric facilities to save money, as the department was paying R320 per day per patient to Life Esidimeni. The bulk of state-subsidised patients would be moved to the care of cheaper community-based organisations. Mahlangu encountered huge public opposition, but went ahead with her decision. Experts, families and activists warned that the organisations could not provide the high-level care most Life Esidimeni patients needed. On 13 September 2016, in what later became known as the
Life Healthcare Esidimeni Scandal, Mahlangu disclosed during an oral reply to questions from
Jack Bloom, that 36 psychiatric patients that were transferred from Life Healthcare Esidimeni earlier in 2016 had died while in the care of the NGOs. This prompted the Health Minister
Aaron Motsoaledi to request the health ombudsman Professor
Malegapuru W Makgoba to investigate the deaths two days after the disclosure by Mahlangu. A report requested by the Minister of Health was finally released on 1 February 2017, after it was delayed by Mahlangu who wanted time to peruse the document, as well as an extension of time to provide feedback. The report concluded that many more than 36 patients had died and recommended that Mahlangu's suitability as MEC be reconsidered.
Aftermath On the evening of 1 February 2017, shortly after the release of the Health Ombud's report, Mahlangu resigned from the Executive Council. Premier Makhura said that she would be succeeded as MEC by
Gwen Ramokgopa, the incumbent national Deputy Minister of Health, and that Gauteng Social Development MEC
Nandi Mayathula-Khoza would oversee her portfolio in an acting capacity until then. Mahlangu also resigned her seat in the Gauteng Provincial Legislature, although she remained a member of the
Provincial Executive Committee of the ANC in Gauteng. Her re-election to the Provincial Executive Committee in July 2018 caused public outcry, until in December 2018 the ANC
National Executive Committee asked her to resign from the body. The Life Esidimeni deaths were investigated by an
inquest and by arbitrator
Dikgang Moseneke. Mahlangu was not available to testify at the arbitration hearings, apparently because she was writing exams at the
London School of Economics, although the university told the
Bhekisisa Centre for Health Journalism that no exams were taking place. She ultimately appeared to testify in 2018 and disputed the Health Ombud's implication that she had been
negligent, arguing that she had been the political head of the Gauteng Department of Health and that it would have been inappropriate for her to intervene in the department's operational activities. ==Personal life==