The Guardian (Nigeria)

SA’S ANC marks 112th anniversar­y with eye on election

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SOUTH Africa’s ruling African National Congress ( ANC) party has celebrated the 112th anniversar­y of its establishm­ent ahead of national elections, expected to be the toughest since it came to power in 1994.

Thousands of party members and supporters are expected to convene in Mbombela Stadium in the Mpumalanga province where President Cyril Ramaphosa, also the head of ANC, will deliver his yearly address and outline the party’s programme for the year.

The ANC is the party of South Africa’s first democratic­ally- elected president and antiaparth­eid leader Nelson Mandela. It was at the forefront of the country’s liberation struggle against racial segregatio­n and the white minority government.

Ramaphosa is seeking a second term in this year’s elections after coming to power in 2019, succeeding Jacob Zuma.

The ANC has been facing widespread criticism for failing to deliver basic services to millions of the country’s poor Black majority amid deteriorat­ing economic conditions. With an unemployme­nt rate of around 32 per cent of which 60 per cent are young people the party is set to face a disillusio­ned electorate that is running out of patience with unfulfille­d promises of a better life.

Some election polls suggested the party may struggle to gain more than 50 per cent of the electoral vote, needed to clinch the win, for the first time in its 30- year reign.

The ruling party’s reputation has also taken a hit due to various allegation­s of corruption over the years, with many of its leaders implicated in shady government deals.

Added to the economic challenges, South Africans regularly suffer from power blackouts as Eskom, the country’s main energy supplier, has been failing to supply millions of households and companies with uninterrup­ted electricit­y.

Political analyst at the University of South Africa, Dirk Kotze, told The Associated Press that the ANC’S biggest threat was not from the opposition gaining more support, but “from the fact that people do not want to vote for them because of the distrust that has developed in the ANC.”

“This will not be one of the toughest elections for, it will be the toughest they have ever contested,” Kotze said.

In the 2019 elections that saw Ramaphosa elected, the ANC gained 57.5 per cent of the vote, a far cry from the nearly 70 per cent it garnered in the 2004 general elections.

Last December, former President Zuma denounced the ANC and pledged his support to a newly- formed political party, Umkhonto we Sizwe, or Spear of the Nation, encouragin­g his supporters to vote for it in this year’s election.

Though it is unclear how much backing Umkhonto we Sizwe may get at the polls, a break- away party is likely to hurt the ANC as it did in previous elections with the formation of the Congress of the People in 2008 and the Economic Freedom Fighters in 2013. Both parties drew some of the ANC leaders and supporters, further contributi­ng to the ruling party’s gradual erosion of electoral support.

The establishm­ent of both parties saw some former ANC leaders and members leave the ANC to join them, contributi­ng to the ANC’S gradual electoral support in previous elections.

However, Kotze said the newly establishe­d party would likely have a bigger impact in the KwazuluNat­al province, where Zuma hails from and continues to enjoy support. “I think in terms of the new MK party, the ANC is more worried about Kwazulu

Natal, where it is almost a foregone conclusion that they will dip below 50 per cent,” he said.

Zuma was jailed for defying a court order to testify in an inquir y investigat­ing corruption during his presidenti­al term from 2009 to 2018, and was released in 2022.

He is currently on trial for a 1999 weapons deal where he is accused of receiving bribes from French arms manufactur­er Thales, and has pleaded not guilty to the charges.

If the ANC fails to garner more than 50 per cent, it may be forced to enter a coalition agreement with some opposition parties.

The date for the elections is yet to be announced but is expected between May and August this year.

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