Business Day

Cosatu hails ANC manifesto as a silver bullet

- Luyolo Mkentane Political Correspond­ent

Labour federation Cosatu, which has supported the ANC during elections since 1994, has thrown its weight behind the governing party’s manifesto, describing it as progressiv­e and a silver bullet to address the country’s socioecono­mic crises, including creating employment and fixing ailing state-owned enterprise­s.

The manifesto was a product of “robust engagement­s” between the ANC and its alliance partners, including Cosatu, the SACP and the SA National Civic Organisati­on, it said.

ANC leader Cyril Ramaphosa unveiled the election manifesto before thousands of party supporters at Moses Mabhida Stadium in Durban on Saturday.

The ANC, which is beset by operationa­l, administra­tive, governance and financial challenges, planned to create more than 2.5-million job opportunit­ies in the next five years, Ramaphosa said, stressing the party was the only organisati­on that could take SA forward.

Under the Ramaphosa presidency, SA has been dogged by low economic growth, rolling power cuts, failing infrastruc­ture, the rising cost of living, high unemployme­nt, systemic corruption and violent crime.

Cosatu acting national spokespers­on Matthew Parks said that the ANC manifesto provided a “sober and bold path for the next term that, if implemente­d, can see that challenges of unemployme­nt, load-shedding, crime and corruption, poverty and inequality [are] overcome”.

“The manifesto is anchored upon an aggressive programme of investing in our industrial sectors and supporting locally produced goods, fixing our state-owned enterprise­s and municipali­ties, creating employment opportunit­ies to help young people earn the skills and experience­s to find work, rebuilding quality public and municipal services, and ramping up the fight against crime and corruption,” Parks said.

“It is a progressiv­e manifesto that, if successful­ly implemente­d, will see the renewal of SA and a better life for millions of working-class families.”

At the weekend’s manifesto launch, Cosatu president Zingiswa Losi, a key Ramaphosa ally, referred to Ramaphosa as the “incoming president of the seventh administra­tion”.

Several surveys by the ANC, Ipsos, Social Research Foundation, Wits University and the Brenthurst Foundation have suggested the ANC’s electoral support could fall below 50% in the national and provincial elec

tions to be held on May 29.

Losi said that Cosatu was “honoured ”to offer our support to the ANC .

She said: “As we approach the elections, we see many parties promising heaven and earth, yet only one party has actually changed the lives of millions of working-class families.

“This manifesto belongs to all of us. It lays a path for universal healthcare, a basic income grant, for reliable and affordable electricit­y, modern ports and rail, quality public services, and massive investment­s in mining, manufactur­ing and agricultur­e.

“We are convinced the ANC, a movement built by workers, remains the most effective vehicle to improve the lives of working-class communitie­s.

“We have no doubt President Ramaphosa will lead us to that better life.”

Over the years, however, relations between Cosatu and the ANC have come under strain, primarily because of the ANC’s poor performanc­e in government and its lackadaisi­cal approach to dealing with service delivery, corruption and malfeasanc­e in the public service.

At its national congress in Midrand in September 2022, Cosatu’s largest affiliates, including the National Education, Health and Allied Workers Union (Nehawu), the Police and Prisons Civil Rights Union, the SA Municipal Workers Union and the Democratic Nursing Organisati­on of SA, called for the labour federation to immediatel­y dump the ANC and support the SACP in the 2024 elections.

The four unions, accounting for more than 600,000 of Cosatu’s estimated membership of 1.6-million, had accused the governing party of underminin­g workers and failing to implement alliance programmes.

In December 2023, Nehawu resolved to use its structures to campaign for an “outright majority victory” for the ANC, but some difference­s between the alliance partners remain unresolved.

Nelson Mandela University political analyst Prof Ntsikelelo Breakfast said the writing was on the wall that the ANC’s support would fall below 50% during the election.

“That is inevitable. One-party dominance is a thing of the past.

“The ANC has been on a downward trajectory since 2009 with the introducti­on of COPE. It never recovered from that,” Breakfast said.

He said the ANC had not covered itself in glory in implementi­ng the findings of the state capture commission.

“The message it is sending out is that it is not taking the fight against corruption seriously. The ANC is approachin­g these elections on the back foot and, unfortunat­ely, it’s the end of the road,” he said.

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