Jeffrey has been described as a "champion" of the Prevention and Combating of Hate Crimes and Hate Speech Bill.[16] According to the Business Day, as a senior member of the Portfolio Committee on Justice he drove the ANC caucus's efforts to pass the controversial Legal Practice Act,[17] for which he continued to advocate after he was appointed to the Ministry.[18][19]
Controversies
Remark about Lindiwe Mazibuko
In a parliamentary debate in June 2013, Jeffrey compared Lindiwe Mazibuko's stature as opposition leader with her "weight," by which many understood him to mean her body weight. According to the Hansard, he said, "The Honourable Mazibuko may be a person of some weight, is she a person of some stature?"[20] Following national media coverage,[21][22][23] the ANC issued a statement saying that Jeffery had not intended to comment on Mazibuko's physical appearance, but that he would unconditionally withdraw his remark.[24] He later apologised to Mazibuko in Parliament.[25][26]
Powers of the Public Protector and Nkandla judgement
According to the Mail and Guardian, by 2013 Jeffery had "a history of sparring with Public ProtectorThuli Madonsela over the extent of her [office's] independence."[27] In 2014 and 2015, while Deputy Minister, he made headlines for arguing that the Nkandla report and other decisions by the Public Protector were not legally binding.[28][29][30][31][32][33] In April 2016, he defended President Jacob Zuma in a parliamentary debate on an unsuccessful motion to remove him from office following a Constitutional Court judgement about his non-compliance with the Public Protector's report. Jeffery reportedly said that, while the judgement found that the President's conduct had been inconsistent with the Constitution, it did not find that Zuma had committed a "serious violation."[34][35] He also reportedly said that even the incumbent Public Protector, Thuli Madonsela, was unsure about the extent of the office's powers, leading Madonsela to respond on Twitter.[36][37][38] In 2015, she claimed that Jeffery had initiated efforts to shrink the Office of the Public Protector,[39] which he denied.[40]
In 2017, Jeffery received further media attention for defending replacements Zuma had made at the Judicial Service Commission, which recommends judicial appointments. Jeffery argued, as he already had in 2014,[41][42][43] against the view that Zuma was undermining the independence of the judiciary.[44][45][46]