Cape Times

Walking tightrope between populism, pragmatism big test for Ramaphosa

- Mashupye Herbert Maserumule Maserumule is professor of public affairs at the Tshwane University of Technology

MAIDEN speeches are tricky. The one delivered by newly elected ANC president Cyril Ramaphosa required extraordin­ary ingenuity.

He had to knit together multiple dynamics into a coherent whole. Ramaphosa managed to do this, delivering a speech which largely resonated with the delegates.

His maiden address to the party, at the end of its 54th national conference, was shaped in the context of a narrow victory following a fierce and highly polarised contest in a factionali­sed organisati­on.

A necessary aspect of his leadership was therefore to unite the ANC for a new beginning in a way that didn’t rock the boat.

Ramaphosa’s speech showed he might be the leader South Africa has been waiting for. Its power lay in its simplicity and ordinarine­ss. Measured but forthright, he touched on many policies that were approved by the conference. These included resolution­s that tried to give meaning to the goal of achieving “radical socio-economic transforma­tion”.

Two policy initiative­s in particular set the cat among the pigeons: land redistribu­tion without compensati­on and fee-free higher education.

These are policy extremes with far-reaching implicatio­ns for the economy, and that could easily create distress. They require exceptiona­l leadership, a sense of ingenuity and dexterity, both at party and state levels – lest recklessne­ss sully policy intentions.

Ramaphosa struck the right note as he thanked delegates for electing him. But the real test of his leadership will lie in how he walks the tightrope between populism and pragmatism, and his ability to make his incongruou­s leadership team share his vision and approach. Ramaphosa did not shy away from the elephant in the room – corruption.

But will he be able to take decisive action given the permutatio­ns of the motley crew of the ANC’s top leadership team as well as those who were chosen to serve on its national executive committee (NEC)? The two outcomes might have made his presidenti­al victory pyrrhic.

The power dynamics in the NEC – the party’s highest decision-making body between national conference­s – will come to the fore as soon as Ramaphosa moves to act against those implicated in the State of Capture report produced by former public protector Thuli Madonsela.

The trickiest issue will be what to do about Jacob Zuma, who remains president of the country even though his term as ANC president has ended. This means that South Africa faces a gridlock as the two “centres of power” – Ramaphosa as head of the ANC and Zuma as head of the country – vie for power.

There are many in the country who want the ANC to recall Zuma as president of the Republic. There are a number of understand­able reasons for this, above the two-centres-of-power problem.

Chief among them relate to various court judgments against Zuma. One of the latest was a decision by the North Gauteng High Court to dismiss his applicatio­n for the review of the State of Capture report.

It also ordered Zuma to comply with the remedial action set out in the report.

Zuma is appealing the court’s decision. This runs against the wishes of the ANC conference, which called for him to institute a judicial commission of inquiry, as recommende­d by the public protector.

How the ANC deals with this will determine whether Ramaphosa meant what he said when he declared: “The people of South Africa want action. They do not want words.”

On policy issues, the speech tried to moderate populism with a semblance of pragmatism. A caveat that the ANC’s new policy on land reform shouldn’t compromise food security and destroy financial markets, and that its implicatio­ns on property rights should be adroitly managed, exemplifie­s this.

In politics, populism is as important as pragmatism. As American anthroposo­phist Joel Wendt put it, populism is rooted in the people, and therefore gives legitimacy to a political system. It is sustained by pragmatism, especially at the level of policy implementa­tion.

It appears that, as his speech showed, Ramaphosa’s leadership of the ANC’s newly found radicalism is going to be that of pragmatic populism – the ability to manage expectatio­ns generated by populist policy posturing to recapture waning electoral support, with extraordin­ary care not to destroy the sources of revenue necessary to sustain the state.

But this will be a huge challenge, particular­ly when it comes to delivering on the promise of feefree higher education.

At issue is the haste with which Zuma announced the new policy on the eve of the ANC’s elective conference, sparking suspicion that it was intended to influence the outcome of the race for the presidency in favour of Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma, his anointed candidate.

His announceme­nt sent the higher education sector into a tailspin and caught the National Treasury off guard as no discussion­s had been had about how to fund it.

Fee-free higher education is a poisoned chalice for Ramaphosa. It is being used by opposition parties for political opportunis­m on campuses. And uncertaint­ies about its administra­tion will probably be blown out of proportion to spark disruption­s.

Zuma’s hasty pronouncem­ent on this politicall­y charged and emotive issue is going to be the first test of Ramaphosa’s mastery of the art of managing the confluence between populism and pragmatism, not as binary opposites, but as elements of the same policy.

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CYRIL RAMAPHOSA

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