Business Day

ANC’s electoral support slides below 40%

Brenthurst Foundation poll is in line with several others

- Luyolo Mkentane

A latest survey by Johannesbu­rg-based think-tank the Brenthurst Foundation shows the ANC’s electoral support plummeting below 40% as political parties up the ante in the build-up to the crucial 2024 national and provincial elections on May 29.

The phone survey, which polled 1,506 registered voters nationally between February 12 and 28, shows ANC support falling to 39% on a 66% turnout.

The survey has a 3% margin of error.

The survey is in line with several others — including by Standard Bank, Wits University, the Social Research Foundation, the ANC and Ipsos — indicating the governing party’s electoral support could fall below 50% for the first time.

With this possibilit­y in mind, the DA has entered into a preelectio­ns coalition pact with other opposition parties, including

ActionSA, IFP, Freedom Front Plus, ACDP and Isanco called the multiparty charter for SA (MPC), with the aim of unseating the ANC.

The latest survey shows DA support increasing to 27%, uMkhonto weSizwe (MK) party — which is backed by former president Jacob Zuma — getting 13%, EFF 10%, IFP 2% and MPC (DA, IFP, ActionSA, Freedom Front Plus) 33%.

KWAZULU-NATAL

Gauteng, SA’s economic and financial hub, which contribute­s nearly 40% to national GDP, is set to be a battlegrou­nd province during the elections, with opposition party leaders, including DA Gauteng leader Solly Msimanga, EFF MP Mbuyiseni Ndlozi, ActionSA Gauteng chair Funzi Ngobeni and Rise Mzansi national chair Vuyiswa Ramokgopa, all seeking to topple ANC Gauteng chair Panyaza Lesufi as premier.

In Gauteng, the ANC falls to 34% from the 51% it mustered in the 2019 general elections, DA increases to 32%, EFF 11%, MK 6%, ActionSA 5%, Build One SA (Bosa) 5% and MPC 38%.

In KwaZulu-Natal, where Zuma has been criss-crossing the province urging voters to support his political project, the MK party is projected to get 25%, ANC 20%, DA 19%, IFP 19% and EFF 14%.

BEST-RUN PROVINCE

Of those polled, 32% believed the DA-run Western Cape was the best governed province in SA, followed by Gauteng with 18%, KwaZulu-Natal 9%, the Eastern Cape 6%, Limpopo 5%, Mpumalanga 4%, Free State 3%, the North West 1% and the Northern Cape 1%.

The City of Cape Town was the best governed metro at 33%, with Johannesbu­rg coming in at 12%, Nelson Mandela Bay 9%, eThekwini 6%, Ekurhuleni 6%, Tshwane 6%, Mangaung 5% and Buffalo City 3%.

The metros of Johannesbu­rg and Ekurhuleni are run by a coalition, including the ANC and EFF, while Tshwane is governed by a DA-led coalition.

Meanwhile, Moody ’ s Investor Service last week sent the rating of Ekurhuleni further into junk territory and placed Tshwanes ’ on review for a downgrade for failing to submit its audited financial statements.

The ratings agency downgraded Ekurhuleni’s long-term issuer (domestic), senior unsecured ratings to Caa2, three notches below the highest junk status in a reflection of a very high credit risk. Moody’s also put the City of Tshwane’s long-term issuer of Caa2 and its national scale rating of Caa1.za on review for further cuts.

The Brenthurst Foundation survey put both the DA and ANC at 33% for being “most effective at governing”, followed by the EFF at 9%, IFP 5%, ActionSA 1%,

Freedom Front Plus 1%, other 2%, and 16% didn’t know.

Of those polled, 80% believed SA was headed in the wrong direction, while 17% thought otherwise and 3% did not know.

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