Helen Zille swimming in a pothole in Douglasdale.
Image: X/@DAGauteng
HELEN Zille's viral video of her swimming in a flooded pothole in Johannesburg has sparked a heated debate about the city's declining infrastructure and her campaign promises.
The Johannesburg mayoral candidate for the Democratic Alliance (DA) posted the now-viral video on Monday, showing herself wading through murky water on Balder Road in Douglasdale.
“Here we are, with a free and wonderful Saturday afternoon swim,” Zille says in the clip, half-satirical, half-searing.
Moments later, she dips her head underwater, joking about searching for fish. Her message was clear: this is what residents are forced to live with.
According to Zille, the water-filled crater has persisted for nearly three years, triggered by a burst pipe that has repeatedly been repaired—only to fail again.
“Neighbours can’t get out of their driveways,” she said in the video.
“The council came and fixed it… and burst the pipe again. This is what people have to live with.”
Her campaign pledges are sweeping: reliable water and electricity, functional roads, 200,000 new jobs, tougher action against crime and corruption, and a professionalised city government.
The pothole plunge distilled those promises into a single, visceral image.
But the reaction has been anything but unified.
On social media, the video triggered a surge of commentary, some amused, others scathing.
User, @kulture_santana dismissed it bluntly: “Thanks for the entertainment… we’re still not voting for you.”
Another, @Gamsahabnidal questioned its intent: “You think people will vote for you because of this?”
Health concerns were also raised, with @VimleshRajbansi warning of risks ranging from E. coli to skin infections from contaminated water.
Yet others applauded the theatrics, with @HelpF85398 remarking, “Well done… that water must be freezing,” while @callingoutshxt declared, “Helen is already Joburg mayor—people just haven’t caught on yet.”
Johannesburg’s infrastructure has become a daily frustration for residents—burst pipes, impassable roads and inconsistent basic services eroding confidence in local government.
For residents of Douglasdale, however, the debate is less about optics than reality.
The city has promised to deliver services to its residents.