Gayton McKenzie

Gayton McKenzie (born 10 March 1974) is a South African politician who is currently serving as Minister of Sports, Arts and Culture since July 2024.

He is a former criminal who was jailed for robbery for 17 years. He is a businessman, motivational speaker, author and former Executive Mayor of the Central Karoo District Municipality in South Africa. He is also the president of the Patriotic Alliance political party. He came to prominence in the early 2000s for his role in a prison exposé that eventually led to his early release amid an investigation of prison corruption by the Jali Commission of Inquiry. McKenzie grew up in the Heidedal neighborhood of Bloemfontein, South Africa.

Business activities
McKenzie used his story of changing from a life of crime during the apartheid years in South Africa to attaining success as a businessman as the basis for his popular motivational talks. He travelled to many schools in South Africa during his early years as a speaker, sponsored by a security company.

He has gone on to work as a consultant in the mining industry and runs a diversified business with interests in restaurants, hotels and events venues, logistics and transport, imports, mining, energy, entertainment and events, publishing and farming.

Publishing
Many of his books have been bestsellers in South Africa, starting with The Choice: The Gayton McKenzie Story. Other books include A Hustler's Bible, The Uncomfortable Truth, Trapped, Kill Zuma By Any Means Necessary, and A Hustler's Bible, The New Testament.

Politics
McKenzie launched the Patriotic Alliance political party on 30 November 2013, and became the party's first president. McKenzie, along with long-time friend Kenny Kunene, have become known for using open letters to provoke political debate, cause controversy and attract attention. Kunene left the Economic Freedom Fighters months after its formation before helping to launch the Patriotic Alliance.

At the end of April 2014, just more than a week before the elections of 7 May, McKenzie wrote a highly critical open letter to Economic Freedom Fighters president Julius Malema, which gained widespread attention. In the letter and in subsequent interviews, McKenzie referred to Malema as the "biggest threat facing South Africa". This was based partly on the EFF's policies on land expropriation and nationalisation. The primary criticism, however, was focused on the character of Malema himself, whom he accused of not being a real revolutionary, a "false prophet" whose promises would take South Africa to civil war and someone who had "stolen" significant amounts of public money during his political ascent. Malema dismissed the letter as predictable rhetoric prior to an election.

In 2024 Gayton McKenzie was appointed to the position of Minister of Sports, Art and Culture. He promptly pledged his ministerial salary to be donated to a charity that works to recover missing children. Controversially, the charity, Joslin Smith Foundation, was founded by McKenzie himself only a few weeks prior.

Corruption
In 2022, then Central Karoo District Municipality mayor, Gayton McKenzie raised R3 million for service delivery at a gala dinner fundraising event in Sandton. The money was never deposited into the municipality's bank accounts. In 2023, Eugene Botha, national head of legal affairs for the Patriotic Alliance and whose bank account the money was later found, said that the money would be treated as a donation to the Patriotic Alliance and declared to the IEC. In 2024, the Western Cape High Court ordered that McKenzie and the law firm linked to Botha, Botha E & Erasmus Y Inc, hand over relevant documents to investigators looking into allegations of corruption.

Gang ties
Gayton McKenzie, a convicted former criminal and 26s gang boss who was jailed for robbery for 17 years, has been linked to gang members as party leader of the Patriotic Alliance.

In 2022, McKenzie was involved in the transfer of Eldorado Park gangster Jermaine Prim from a medium-security to a maximum-security facility; a move described as part of a gang war. In 2024, a Mail & Guardian investigation alleged McKenzie's party is funded by the daughter of slain 27s gang boss, William “Red” Stevens; McKenzie denied the claims made in an audio recording by its regional treasurer.