Between 2019 and 2024, Nel left frontline politics to work in Luthuli House in the office of the ANC secretary-general. He returned to Parliament in the May 2024 general election, after which President Cyril Ramaphosa appointed him to return to his former position as Deputy Minister of Justice.
In South Africa's first post-apartheid elections in April 1994, Nel was elected to represent the ANC in the National Assembly, the lower house of the South African Parliament.[5] He remained in his seat for the next 25 years, gaining re-election in four consecutive general elections.[3] During the first Parliament, from 1994 to 1996, he served in Theme Committee 5 of the Constitutional Assembly, representing the ANC in constitutional negotiations regarding the post-apartheid judiciary.[1] After the June 1999 election, he was appointed as the ANC's whip in the second Parliament's Portfolio Committee on Justice,[1] in which capacity columnist Robert Kirby criticised him as an "odiously smug African National Congress flunky".[6] Alongside his parliamentary positions, Nel was a member of the National Executive Committee of the ANC Youth League from 1996 to 2001,[3] and he was centrally involved in the league's first foray into financial investments in 1997.[7]
In April 2002, he was promoted to Deputy Chief Whip of the Majority Party,[8] and he served in that position until 2008, with a lengthy stint as Acting Chief Whip from 2006 to 2007.[3][4] During that period, in 2005, he chaired an internal inquiry into the conduct of ANC provincial chairperson Ebrahim Rasool, the report of which was regarded as responsible for Rasool's resignation as Western Cape Premier.[9][10]
He served in the Justice Ministry until a reshuffle on 9 July 2013, when Zuma appointed him to replace Yunus Carrim as Deputy Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs (COGTA).[14] A Mail & Guardian editorial speculated that his transfer from the Justice Ministry was not due to his own performance, which had been "solid", but instead was due to Zuma's wish to promote John Jeffery to Nel's former position.[15] A government source told the same newspaper that Nel had been transferred to strengthen the COGTA portfolio with his "eye for detail".[16]
He was reappointed as COGTA deputy minister after the May 2014 general election.[17] At that time, Zuma also appointed a second COGTA minister, Obed Bapela; Bapela was to have responsibility for the traditional affairs portfolio, while Nel would lead the cooperative governance (provincial and local government) side of the ministry.[18] He and Bapela retained their positions throughout Zuma's second term and after Cyril Ramaphosa's midterm election as president. However, Nel did not seek re-election in the May 2019 general election,[19] and he subsequently dropped from Parliament and from the executive, replaced by Parks Tau.[20]
Luthuli House: 2019–2024
After his departure from Parliament, Nel worked in Luthuli House in the office of ANC Secretary-General Ace Magashule. As coordinator he liaised between the Secretary-General's office and the ANC National Executive Committee.[21] He remained in that position after Magashule was suspended,[22] and indeed he received death threats for his role in implementing the suspension.[23][24]
Ahead of the May 2024 general election, Nel appeared on the ANC's list of parliamentary candidates in an apparent return to frontline politics.[28] During the campaign, opposition party Build One South Africa published a formal apology to Nel after falsely claiming, on a Johannesburg billboard, that the Zondo Commission had implicated Nel in corruption.[29]
He was elected to return to the National Assembly in the election, and he was a member of the ANC's team in the party's subsequent coalition negotiations with the opposition Democratic Alliance.[30][31] Announcing his third cabinet in June, President Ramaphosa appointed Nel to deputise Thembi Nkadimeng as Deputy Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development.[32]
Personal life
In December 2005, Nel married Kim Robinson, a black woman from Queens, New York.[33] They met in Johannesburg in 1996 while Robinson, a Harvard Law graduate, was clerking for a South African judge.[2]