Cape Times

ANC divided on power sharing

- Bheki Mbanjwa, Bongani Hans, Khaya Koko, Siyabonga Mkhwanazi

PRESIDENT Jacob Zuma has thrown his weight behind the proposed power-sharing deal between Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma and Cyril Ramaphosa. But his supporters are divided on the matter.

At the ANC national policy conference in Nasrec, Joburg KwaZulu-Natal chairperso­n Sihle Zikalala proposed a compromise deal which would see any one of the two presidenti­al candidates becoming deputy president should he or she lose to the other in the race for the top spot.

This, Zikalala believes, would prevent a bloodbath and a possible split after the party’s elective conference in December.

Independen­t Media learnt that in one of the closed commission­s Zuma expressed support for the arrangemen­t, the basis for trying to mend the fissures within the party that arise out of contestati­on.

“In our commission, it was only Zikalala and Zuma who articulate­d it. Other people just ignored it. It’s a new proposal, which we obviously need to consult widely on,” said a source, who asked to remain anonymous.

Another source confirmed Zuma’s support for the proposed arrangemen­t. “He said people don’t sleep these days (and) spend sleepless nights lobbying (for positions). He even said it would be good if it (the proposal) could be replicated at lower levels.”

However, some of the influentia­l Zuma supporters do not agree with the possible arrangemen­t, which may signify cracks within the camp.

ANC Youth League president Collen Maine said he felt the move would not pass the test of the ANC constituti­on, which allows for every position in the Top Six to be contested.

“It means that if there are 10 candidates, and the other one gets 12 votes and others each get seven votes are we going to have all of them as deputy presidents?” said Maine.

The secretary of the league in KwaZulu-Natal, Thanduxolo Sabelo, said the league stands by its position that Mpumalanga Province Premier and ANC provincial chairperso­n David Mabuza should be the next deputy president.

He said uniting the ANC should not be based on who gets elected to certain positions.

“If you are not elected in the ANC, the culture of the ANC says you must then be able to support the leadership that has been elected.

“Unity of the party must be the unity of purpose. You cannot be united by positions. We must be united by programmes, which we are here to discuss today,” he said.

However, eThekwini Region secretary Bheki Ntuli said the ANC’s biggest region was fully behind the proposal.

“The situation whereby we have our own Top Six and others have their own Top Six leads to breakaways after conference­s. We should have a system that would allow the loser to be accommodat­ed as the deputy president and the deputy secretary-general,” said Ntuli.

Mdumiseni Ntuli, the spokespers­on of the ANC in KwaZulu-Natal, said the proposals were meant to destroy slate politics. He agreed that it would mean changing the way in which voting happens.

A delegate said some viewed the proposal as a sign that KZN “is panicking and now they just want to secure NDZ’s (Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma’s) future in the presidency.”

A KwaZulu-Natal PEC member said: “Even when the small provinces come to us with proposals, we will engage with them and adopt those positions if it makes sense.”

ANC Northern Cape chairperso­n Zamani Saul also slammed the KZN proposal, asserting that what the province was trying to achieve “was leadership through arrangemen­t”.

He said his province backed the party’s deputy president, Cyril Ramaphosa, “because it is a matter of principal. Since 1956, all presidents of the ANC had been deputy presidents before.”

Sabelo dismissed claims that Zuma was losing support. Eastern Cape provincial secretary Oscar Mabuyane has backed the proposal. He said the branches of the ANC would have to back the proposal to foster unity in the ANC.

 ?? Picture: Simphiwe Mbokazi ?? TOP SPOTS: President Jacob Zuma and Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa
Picture: Simphiwe Mbokazi TOP SPOTS: President Jacob Zuma and Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa

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