Business Day

ANC fears being shown the door

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It is the ANC that is fighting for political survival, not its suspended secretary-general Ace Magashule. That is the reality President Cyril Ramaphosa has to confront as the clock ticks towards the 2021 local government elections.

The ANC suffered huge electoral losses in the last municipal poll, losing Nelson Mandela Bay, Tshwane and Johannesbu­rg five years ago. A decline in one election in those metropolit­an areas, as well as in Bloemfonte­in, eThekwini and Mahikeng, put it on notice at a time when it was having to contend with public discontent over the Gupta family’s exercise of unofficial power and rampant corruption that was becoming harder to hide.

The ANC also struggled to win a majority in Gauteng and dropped below 60% support in the 2019 national and provincial elections. That it was able to get close to that magic number was attributed by some, including transport minister Fikile Mbalula, to the elevation of Ramaphosa to the ANC presidency in December 2017. Without change, Mbalula suggested the party may have dropped to 40%.

Electoral trends show South Africans are frustrated by the party and have stayed away in successive elections, especially in Gauteng. With SA 27 years into democracy, the ANC is struggling to find relevance beyond its historical role as a liberator.

That is what puts the ANC’s suspension of Magashule and 30 others who are facing serious charges into sharp focus, with Ramaphosa acknowledg­ing its declining electoral support during his appearance at the state capture inquiry in April. “Electoral support of the ANC went down because of corrosive corruption which people found abhorrent,” he said in the most frank comments yet by an ANC leader on the subject. “We need a renewal.”

The ANC had been less than honest with itself before this. Erstwhile president Jacob Zuma, having plastered his face on posters in places such as Soweto and Atteridgev­ille where he was unpopular, blamed his party opponents for not working hard enough. Those in ANC local structures blamed him for parachutin­g in unpopular leaders.

Ramaphosa’s reform agenda seems to be finally bearing fruit despite resistance from within. In a first for the 109-year-old party, an elected official in arguably the second-most powerful post in the organisati­on has been asked to vacate his office in the national interest. Ironically, his belligeren­ce might end up showing that there is no way back.

Elements in the ANC have resisted change from day one and Ramaphosa has not acted with enough force to counter them. Eager to prevent a full-blown fight, he has sought to project a picture of unity, delaying the big decisions and toying with their pet obsessions such as the call to nationalis­e the Reserve Bank.

While Magashule’s suspension marks a key achievemen­t for Ramaphosa, who contested for the ANC and SA presidency on a renewal-and-reform ticket, the move sets in motion a comeback fight by him and his loyalists and a bid to have him reinstated ahead of the party’s next elective conference in 2022.

Magashule’s outrageous behaviour, unilateral­ly suspending Ramaphosa, meant that at the end of the national executive committee meeting this weekend a fake show of unity could not be put on. In that sense, his gamble backfired. Now he will have to show that he has a level of support that could threaten Ramaphosa and possibly split the ANC once again.

History shows splitting from the party has not been a profitable endeavour, so the remnants of the Magashule faction will eventually desert him and stay inside the fold, even if he is kicked out. If they are, as former president Thabo Mbeki asserted, driven by self-interest, it is hard to see any other outcome.

Neutralisi­ng Magashule may not necessaril­y end the warfare within the party. What is clear is that the electorate will continue to punish the ANC, potentiall­y leading to its demise if it doesn't put the national interest first.

NEUTRALISI­NG MAGASHULE MAY NOT END THE WARFARE IN A PARTY VOTERS MAY BE KEEN TO PUNISH

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