The New Zealand Herald

Zuma hangs on to power

President survives ninth no-confidence vote but not with full support of his party

- Wendell Roelf in Cape Town — Reuters

South African President Jacob Zuma may have survived an attempt in Parliament to force him from office yesterday but he was left politicall­y wounded after members of his ruling African National Congress (ANC) party voted with the opposition.

The 75-year-old Zuma, in power since 2009, secured 198 votes to the opposition’s 177 in a no-confidence motion held by secret ballot. There were nine abstention­s.

ANC lawmakers erupted into singing and dancing in Parliament even before the Speaker of the House announced the result of the vote in favour of Zuma, whose eight years in office have been dogged by allegation­s of corruption.

“They are pumping propaganda through the media that the ANC is no longer supported by the people. It is their own imaginatio­n,” an exuberant Zuma told a cheering crowd outside Parliament in Cape Town after the result was announced.

“The ANC is supported by the overwhelmi­ng majority,” he said, before breaking boisterous­ly into song, cracking jokes and telling his supporters that the opposition had been thwarted in an attempted power grab.

Zuma has now survived nine noconfiden­ce votes despite a record in office marred by allegation­s of sleaze and influencep­eddling. He had particular­ly upset investors by removing Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan in March, which hit the country’s credit rating.

That has been downgraded to junk by two of the top three rating agencies, unemployme­nt is at a 14-year high of 27.7 per cent and the economy is back in recession.

Had the vote gone against him yesterday, he and his entire Cabinet would have had to step down.

The Speaker of Parliament, Baleka Mbete, had earlier ruled that the vote — unlike other no-confidence votes Zuma has faced — should be by secret ballot, a decision the opposition hoped would embolden ANC members unhappy with Zuma to vote against him.

The ANC holds 249 seats in the 400-seat Parliament and the opposition controls 151, so it required 50 ANC lawmakers backing the opposition to vote Zuma and his Cabinet out. The figures, however, showed that the ANC, which has ruled South Africa since the end of apartheid in 1994, is divided over Zuma and the ANC leadership said it would study the numbers of those who had voted with the opposition or had abstained.

 ??  ?? Jacob Zuma
Jacob Zuma

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