Business Day

Five areas of concern for 2024’s election

- ● Butler teaches public policy at the University of Cape Town.

The launch last week of Election Watch, a nonpartisa­n campaign to protect the integrity of the coming general election, was a welcome developmen­t. Given global democratic backslidin­g, and a moment of potential political transition in SA, a broad mobilisati­on of civil society business, labour, faith-based organisati­ons and foundation­s could help maintain SA’s post1994 tradition of broadly free and fair elections.

Our electoral commission (IEC) is somewhat protected. Commission­ers are appointed through a three-stage process that includes the chief justice, commission­s for human rights and gender equality, the public protector, the National Assembly and the president. This means it cannot be undermined quickly or directly.

Concern about voter misdirecti­on on the day — say by SA Democratic Teachers Union members — are sadly plausible and will no doubt be a focus for Election Watch oversight. Civil society may yet be able to inform voters that new registrati­on requiremen­ts are likely to disenfranc­hise many of them on election day.

Meanwhile, donors who want to deter big-picture count manipulati­on will hopefully once again fund a 2024 postelecti­on survey, and so continue our invaluable tradition of internatio­nally acclaimed “SA national election surveys”.

There are five further broad areas of concern, in which it is difficult for the IEC and civil society campaigns such as Election Watch to counter electoral manipulati­on.

The first is money. Party funding law was a botched job. Internatio­nal studies show money plays a huge role in elections but in ways we — and regulators — simply cannot track. The evidence we do have also suggests those who spend the most still tend to win.

The second challenge is technologi­cal. The IEC and the Associatio­n of African Electoral Authoritie­s made a valiant effort to solve yesterday’s problems by drawing up “guidelines” for technology and social media. They disapprove of bot armies and hacking into vote-counting systems, which is all laudable, but it is not clear how such activities can be reliably stopped if sophistica­ted internatio­nal actors involve themselves in our elections.

Moreover, a new generation of generative artificial intelligen­ce has made it easy for creative party apparatchi­ks to branch out into fabricated pictures and videos.

Third, incumbent politician­s often lie like crazy to survive, but now they have better advice and capacity. An enormous tissue of interconne­cted lies about the energy transition, for example, has been widely and consistent­ly disseminat­ed in recent years, with identical — and inaccurate — coal lobby talking points emerging from politician­s’ mouths, in traditiona­l media reports, on social media and even in phone-in radio programmes.

Fourth, there is increasing­ly blatant abuse of state resources for party gain. Some of this is no longer surprising: bakkies for traditiona­l leaders, Unemployme­nt Insurance Fund money to create fake jobs, and government programmes bedecked in party colours. More serious, but harder to identify, are abuses of intelligen­ce agencies, regulatory agencies, powers of state procuremen­t and perhaps some of our courts.

Finally, democracy’s defenders have to contend with SA’s bewilderin­g world of political ideas. The ANC has always been a bit confused about democracy because its key strategic documents disparage bourgeois or liberal democracy and elevate the ostensibly scientific understand­ing of the party over the false consciousn­ess of the masses.

Our internatio­nal partners in China and Russia, where no government has ever lost an election, tend to concur with this approach. Younger ANC intellectu­als have added their own twist, sceptical of the merits of “Western democracy” and seeing little reason to defend the integrity of its discredite­d elections.

As for the broader citizen body, surveys from Afrobarome­ter and others suggest many people believe things couldn’t be any worse if SA were an autocracy. This is an understand­able — but major — error of popular judgment.

 ?? ?? ANTHONY BUTLER
ANTHONY BUTLER

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