⚠️ Public Profile: Floyd Shivambu’s Rise, Rage & Reputation—Everything They Don’t Want You to Know! 🗞️💣
Floyd Shivambu is more than just the deputy president of the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF)—he’s the architect behind many of the party’s most explosive strategies, calculated media appearances, and political theatrics that have kept the EFF at the center of national headlines.
Born on January 1, 1983, in Malamulele, Limpopo, Shivambu’s political rise has been anything but ordinary.
From his early days in the African National Congress Youth League (ANCYL) to becoming Julius Malema’s right-hand man in the EFF, Shivambu’s journey is paved with rebellion, confrontation, and a relentless hunger for power.
Educated at the University of the Witwatersrand, where he earned a Master’s degree in Political Studies, Shivambu’s academic roots have always contrasted with his fiery persona.
Known for quoting Marx as easily as he throws verbal punches in Parliament, he presents a complex duality: a sharp intellectual who isn’t afraid to go to war in the political arena.
His time in the ANCYL ended in disarray, following his expulsion alongside Malema.
But while many faded into irrelevance, Shivambu doubled down—and helped co-found the EFF in 2013, a move that forever changed South Africa’s political landscape.
Inside the EFF, Shivambu is not just a deputy—he’s the strategic brain.
While Malema commands attention with his charisma and crowd control, Shivambu operates more behind the scenes, often shaping party policy, drafting critical speeches, and orchestrating the EFF’s most confrontational stunts in Parliament.
Whether it’s storming the chambers to demand accountability or calling out ministers during budget speeches, Shivambu has mastered the art of political disruption.
His debates are laced with sarcasm, his insults delivered with surgical precision.
Love him or hate him, you can’t ignore him.
But Shivambu’s career has not been without scandal—and some of them have left permanent stains on his public profile.
In 2018, he was linked to the VBS Mutual Bank scandal, a financial catastrophe that wiped out millions from municipal coffers and affected countless lives.
His brother, Brian Shivambu, was named in forensic reports as a major beneficiary of the looting, and while Floyd denied personal involvement, damning evidence suggested he received funds indirectly through family-run companies.
Despite the denials and legal maneuvering, many believe this scandal severely undercut his credibility—and gave ammunition to his critics who accuse the EFF of being no different from the politicians they condemn.
Still, Shivambu remains untouchable within the party.
The EFF has never publicly reprimanded him over VBS, and his authority has, if anything, increased in recent years.
Party insiders say Shivambu is feared as much as he is respected.
His ability to wield influence quietly makes him one of the most dangerous political operators in the country.
Unlike Malema, whose popularity is tied to personality, Shivambu plays a long game—one of ideology, control, and quiet maneuvering.
Behind the scenes, he is said to be the ideological enforcer, ensuring that the party’s radical economic agenda—expropriation without compensation, nationalization of banks, and dismantling white monopoly capital—remains central to every political battle.
He also plays a key role in vetting candidates, planning protest strategies, and managing the EFF’s relationships with other opposition parties.
When the EFF plots a move, Shivambu’s fingerprints are often all over it.
His personal life, too, has drawn public interest.
Once romantically linked to multiple high-profile figures in political and business circles, Shivambu has kept his family life relatively guarded in recent years.
Some allege this is a calculated move to avoid further media intrusion after the VBS scandal, while others see it as a shift toward a more calculated, professional persona—less tabloid, more tactician.
In Parliament, he remains one of the most confrontational voices, often taking on ministers with open disdain and zero restraint.
His most viral moments include being forcibly removed from the National Assembly, slamming ministers as “puppets of capital,” and once even flipping the narrative on journalists during live interviews.
He’s made enemies in every corner of the establishment—from the ANC to the DA—and wears that as a badge of honor.
But what’s next for Shivambu? That’s the question on everyone’s lips.
With Malema still the dominant face of the EFF, Shivambu’s next move could either see him remain in the shadows or rise to the forefront as a future presidential contender—especially if the EFF ever finds itself in a kingmaker position in coalition politics.
Some analysts believe Shivambu is biding his time, quietly building influence, and waiting for the perfect storm to assert full control of the movement he helped create.
As the country heads toward another contentious election cycle, one thing is certain: Floyd Shivambu will be in the thick of it—debating, provoking, and plotting.
Whether he’s remembered as a revolutionary strategist or a scandal-stained opportunist depends on who you ask.
But in a political landscape that often rewards theatrics over substance, Shivambu is one of the rare figures who thrives on both.
And if you thought you knew everything about him, think again.
The story of Floyd Shivambu is far from over—and the next chapter might just be his most dangerous yet.