Business Day

ANC not in talks about coalitions

- Olivia Kumwenda-Mtambo and Nellie Peyton /Reuters

The ANC is betting on keeping its parliament­ary majority in the May 29 election and is not in talks with other parties on a coalition government, says the deputy secretary-general.

“We will not go to war having accepted defeat. We are going to war to win,” Nomvula Mokonyane told Reuters in an interview. The ANC knew that the “stakes are high because not everybody is comfortabl­e with us in power”.

According to surveys, the ANC is likely to lose its parliament­ary majority for the first time, which would open up the prospects of coalition rule.

“A coalition government won’t work for now,” said Mokonyane, pointing to failed power-sharing attempts at the local government level, where coalitions are said to have largely proved unstable due to lack of legislatio­n to regulate the partnershi­ps.

But the ANC is open to working with anyone as long as they agree on “the task at hand”.

The ANC’s image was tarnished in the past decade by economic stagnation, rising unemployme­nt and repeated corruption scandals involving its top officials.

Analysts say losing its majority might jolt the party to do better on service delivery, expand the economy and address other ills such as crime and corruption. But coalitions could also end up being fractious and impeding already poor service delivery.

Possible coalition partners for the ANC may include the DA and the EFF.

Mokonyane said the ANC learnt from its mistakes, such as extending the electricit­y network to more people without boosting generation capacity or investing in renewables.

IMPERFECTI­ONS

Thirty years after the end of white minority rule, more than 30% of South Africans are unemployed, the murder rate is rising, and income inequality is among the highest in the world.

“We are quite certain that with our challenges and imperfecti­ons, those happened because we’re doing something that was never done,” said Mokonyane.

She criticised foreign ownership of land and mineral resources and said the ANC would do more to put national interests first, while emphasisin­g progress it made in areas such as social welfare and girls’ education.

“The inequality that we see ... it’s very stubborn,” she said. “We’ve tried to turn it around, and 30 years is not a [long] enough period to turn things around.”

 ?? /Freddy Mavunda ?? Stubborn inequality: Deputy secretary-general of the ANC Nomvula Mokonyane.
/Freddy Mavunda Stubborn inequality: Deputy secretary-general of the ANC Nomvula Mokonyane.

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