Jamaica Gleaner

Ruling ANC celebrates election victory

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PRETORIA, South Africa (AP): SOUTH AFRICA’S ruling African National Congress (ANC) on Saturday was preparing to celebrate its win in national elections, with the formal announceme­nt of final results coming later in the day.

With all votes counted, the ANC had 57.5 per cent, the electoral commission said. While a win was never in doubt, it was the worst-ever showing at the polls for the party of the late Nelson Mandela which has ruled South Africa since the end of apartheid 25 years ago. The party won 62 per cent of the vote in 2014.

Voter turnout was another low at 65 per cent, reflecting the frustratio­ns of many South Africans after corruption scandals around the ANC that led former president Jacob Zuma to resign last year under party pressure. Turnout was 74 per cent in 2014.

Current President Cyril Ramaphosa, a Mandela protégé, has vowed to clean up the rot and apologised to South Africans. But his new five-year term is threatened by Zuma allies within the ANC’s leadership who could pressure the party to oust him from power.

Observers have said South Africa’s economy, the most developed in sub-Saharan Africa, would be further weakened if Ramaphosa is removed by his own party. He narrowly won the party leadership in late 2017, weeks before Zuma was pushed out.

Ramaphosa’s image as a leader willing to rid the government of graft helped the ANC’s showing in this election, political analyst Karima Brown said. “It’s a departure from a president who faced continuous allegation­s of corruption,” she said.

But ANC Secretary General Ace Magashule, seen as leading the party faction opposed to Ramaphosa, has said the victory could not be attributed to the president alone.

Widespread disillusio­nment over the ANC and long-standing issues of high unemployme­nt and poor delivery of basic services had been expected to give top opposition parties a boost in Wednesday’s election.

Top opposition party, the liberal Democratic Alliance, slipped in its share of votes, however, winning 20.7 per cent, down from 22.2 per cent in 2014. The populist Economic Freedom Fighters (EEF), in just their second showing in parliament­ary and presidenti­al elections, did gain ground, winning 10.7 per cent of the vote, up from 6.3 per cent five years ago.

The EFF won support notably among younger voters with its outspoken demands for a bigger share of South Africa’s wealth from the country’s white minority. It struck a chord in a country where unemployme­nt is 27 per cent and many in the black majority struggle to get by. The party also had promised to expropriat­e whiteowned land without compensati­on and nationalis­e mines and banks.

 ??  ?? A young girl carries her dog as she crosses the main road, with headline from a newspaper and election posters on the streets of Soweto, South Africa, Friday, May 10, 2019.
A young girl carries her dog as she crosses the main road, with headline from a newspaper and election posters on the streets of Soweto, South Africa, Friday, May 10, 2019.

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