listen to MunghanaLonene FM-IEC PODCAST

MunghanaLonene FM-IEC PODCAST
MunghanaLonene FM-IEC PODCAST

MunghanaLonene FM-IEC PODCAST

SABC Education

The IEC Voter Education campaign, brought to you by the IEC in partnership with SABC Education, is here to help you understand elections in a simple and practical way. Through this podcast, you will learn more about the IEC, why voting matters, how to register, how to check your registration details, and how local government elections affect everyday life in your community. Whether you are voting for the first time or just need a reminder, this series is here to help you feel informed, ready, and confident to take part.

Munghana Lonene - Civic Education - Register to Vote - Part2

A lot of South Africans assume voter registration means a trip to a government office. This series, produced with the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC), addresses that directly. You can register, check your status, or update your details through an online platform, a mobile app, or an SMS — no queue required. Each episode unpacks how these tools work and takes questions from listeners navigating the process in real time. One point that runs through every conversation: your residential address must be accurate. Not as a bureaucratic requirement. It determines your ward and voting district, which means an outdated address puts you in the wrong place on the voters' roll. The series also returns to June 16 — not as ceremony, but as a practical argument. The generation that fought for that day didn't have registration tools in their pocket. This generation does. The voter registration weekend is the next step. Go verify your details.

30:20

Munghana Lonene - Youth Ke Yona - Register to Vote - Part 2

Most people know they can vote in national elections from abroad. Local government elections work differently — you need to be registered at a voting station in the area where you actually live. This series, produced with the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC), makes that distinction clear. Each episode covers the voter registration weekend and what listeners need to do before it closes. The IEC's digital tools — the website, SMS, and WhatsApp — mean most people can check or update their details without visiting a centre in person. The youth focus runs through every conversation. Local government is the election with the most direct impact on daily life: water, roads, electricity, housing. Not registering is still a choice — just one that hands five years of decisions to whoever did show up. Check your name on the voters' roll. Update your address if you've moved. Then go vote.

42:12

Munghana Lonene FM - Civic Education - Introducing the IEC Mandate

South Africa hasn't always had an independent body running its elections. For decades, government ran the process itself, and that history is the reason the IEC exists at all. This is the first episode in our civic education series, and it's about the Independent Electoral Commission, one of South Africa's Chapter 9 institutions set up to protect the country's constitutional democracy. We look at the shift from government-run elections to an independent commission, and what that shift means for how your vote gets handled once it leaves your hand. You'll hear about the IEC's mandate, how its independence works day to day, and the steps it takes to keep political parties and government at arm's length. No interference. No shortcuts. We also get into voter registration, one of the most direct ways citizens shape how strong our democracy is, with local government elections coming up fast. First time voter or tenth time voter, the IEC is the institution making sure your vote counts. Listen in.

27:25

Munghana Lonene FM - Youth Ke Yona - Introducing the IEC Mandate

The IEC runs South Africa's elections. As a Chapter 9 institution, it operates independently of government, with a constitutional mandate to deliver elections that are free, fair, and actually trusted. In this episode, we get into how the Commission works day to day: registering voters, maintaining the national voters' roll, and running civic education programmes like this one. Integrity and impartiality aren't just words on a mandate, they're the rules the IEC has to live by every election cycle. We also get into the youth vote, not the slogan version, but the real question: what changes when young South Africans register, show up, and use that vote to shape decisions that affect them directly. One vote carries the same weight as any other, whether it's cast in a metro or a small town. We talk through what that m The IEC runs South Africa's elections. As a Chapter 9 institution, it operates independently of government, with a constitutional mandate to deliver elections that are free, fair, and actually trusted. In this episode, we get into how the Commission works day to day: registering voters, maintaining the national voters' roll, and running civic education programmes like this one. Integrity and impartiality aren't just words on a mandate, they're the rules the IEC has to live by every election cycle. We also get into the youth vote, not the slogan version, but the real question: what changes when young South Africans register, show up, and use that vote to shape decisions that affect them directly. One vote carries the same weight as any other, whether it's cast in a metro or a small town. We talk through what that means day to day, and the steps you can take right now to check your registration before the next election. Go check your status. eans day to day, and the steps you can take right now to check your registration before the next election. Go check your status.

29:52

Munghana Lonene FM - Civic Education - Local Government Elections

Who switches the lights back on when there's a fault? Who's meant to fix the road outside your house? That's your municipality's job, and local government elections decide who runs it. This episode is about how local and municipal elections actually work, and why the result shows up in your life faster than any national vote does. Your vote buys you a say in who answers for water, electricity, and infrastructure in your own area. The ballot papers look different too, depending on whether you live in a local municipality or a metro. There are two routes onto your council: ward councillors and proportional representation councillors, with independents running in the ward system too. We also cover the legal bar a citizen has to clear to stand for their own community, and how the IEC keeps the count transparent. A joint production from SABC Education and the Electoral Commission (IEC), made so you walk into the voting station knowing what you're choosing and why. Wake up and go out to vote!

39:41

Munghana Lonene FM - Youth Ke Yona - Government Local Elections

Local government decides whether your taps run and your bins get collected. On 4 November 2026, South Africans vote in the Local Government and Municipal Elections, and this episode is about making sure your vote actually has a say in any of that. We talk to the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) about how voter registration really works. The detail that trips people up most: you have to register and vote in the area where you live, not wherever happens to be convenient. On the day, you'll get three ballot papers, not one: ward, local municipality, and district. We also explain the difference between voting for a political party's candidate and voting for an independent running under their own name. This one's especially for young voters navigating the process for the first time, and for anyone who's wondered if local elections actually matter. They decide who runs your council, and who answers when something breaks down the street. Tune in before 4 November.

48:23

Munghana Lonene FM - Civic Education - Register to vote

If you're not on the voters' roll, you can't vote. This episode, produced by the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) in partnership with SABC Education, covers what registration actually requires: who's eligible, which identification the Department of Home Affairs accepts, the green barcoded book, the smart ID card, or a valid temporary identity certificate, and how to get registered, in person or online. Registration is the first gate. Everything else about election day depends on clearing it. Changed address recently? Update your registration, or you could end up at the wrong polling station on election day. Boundaries shift too, and an old registration can put you in the wrong voting district without you knowing it. We also cover how to check your registration status by SMS or on the official website, plus what's coming with the next round of registration weekends. Catch this episode, and the rest of the series, on SABC+ or the official website.

30:20

Munghana Lonene - Youth Ke Yona - Register to Vote

You can register to vote two years before you're old enough to cast one. This episode of Youth Ke Yona, produced by SABC Education with the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC), is about getting young South Africans ready for the 2026 local government elections. Registration opens at 16, so you can be set the moment you turn 18. We walk through which ID counts (the green barcoded book, the smart ID card, or a valid temporary identity certificate) and how to check your registration status through the SMS service or online. Moved recently? Boundaries changed in your area? This episode covers how to update your details so you're linked to the correct voting district. Young people make up a large share of South Africa's population, and local government, from the bins to the budget, runs on whether that group turns up to vote. Tune in for the practical steps. Then go register.

42:12
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