Daily Dispatch

Helen Zille faces ‘leadership moment’ after tweet but fails

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LAST week Western Cape premier and former Democratic Alliance leader Helen Zille faced a leadership moment.

A leadership moment is when an individual, a player in some or other space, has a chance to rise above their own small corner, above the selfish interests of their own constituen­cy, and embrace what could be termed the greater good.

It is never an easy thing to turn around to those who support you and ask them to listen to others. It is a lonely road.

Make no doubt about it, when Zille tweeted that colonialis­m had its positive aspects she was echoing the views of many, many of her fans and political supporters.

Zille, and these supporters, feel no qualms about her tweet: “For those claiming legacy of colonialis­m was ONLY negative, think of our independen­t judiciary, transport infrastruc­ture, piped water etc.”

There is so much that is so wrong about this sentiment, and the arrogance behind it, that one feels too weak to even begin to count the ways in which it offends. Yet let us not be naive: there are many Zille supporters who embrace it fully.

Zille’s leadership moment arrived when that the people she has criticised for decades now always do.

She chose to blame others, to play the race card, to divert attention from the clear and immediate issue in front of her – her tweet was not only wrong, it was offensive in the extreme.

She sounded like Minister Bathabile Dlamini and President Jacob Zuma rolled into one.

First, there was no examinatio­n of the sentiment in her tweet and the incredible hurt and damage it does. Instead, she rushed to proclaim that white South Africans were now a victim group that was not allowed to speak. Really?

Here is what she wrote: “While travel broadens the mind, I tend to forget that, on returning to South Africa, it is best to shrink your mind again to fit the contours of political correctnes­s. Especially if you are white. We pay lip service to equal citizenshi­p. In reality, every opinion is judged on the basis of the colour of the person who expresses it.

“‘Speaking while white’ is considered the ultimate sin, in terms of the increasing­ly popular ideology called ‘critical race theory’.”

This is an extraordin­ary assertion from someone who has spoken loudly, freely and persuasive­ly for decades in the new South Africa. Many have taken Zille on; many others have urged her on.

Yet here she is sounding like a summa cum laude graduate of the Jimmy Manyi school of the race card.

Her extraordin­ary lack of self-examinatio­n does not extend to only her views of those she accuses of being “race theorists”, but to her own comrades in the Democratic Alliance.

She alleges that “the real danger is that the DA, in its quest for votes, may start to swallow every tenet, myth and shibboleth of African racial-nationalis­t propaganda, including the scapegoati­ng of minorities, populist mobilisati­on and political patronage. Then the institutio­nalisation of corruption will only be a matter of time”.

Essentiall­y, says Zille, every black person who expresses pain at the legacy of apartheid will in the next breath be embracing political patronage and populist mobilisati­on. One has to wonder what she really thinks of her protégé Mmusi Maimane and of Phumzile van Damme.

Her words betray her. In her universe, they feel and express their pain at what she has said, and therefore they will keep quiet about corruption. There can be nothing more insulting.

Faced with the moment that Zille faced this past week, a real leader would have taken time off to reflect. She would have looked at the heat and noise occasioned by the Spur restaurant incident.

She would have examined some of the racial rhetoric emanating from some leaders at Human Rights Day rallies.

A leader would have realised that we are sinking, every day now, into a racial morass. We are shouting. Not talking.

We are insulting each other, not seeking solutions.

The idea of a united, non-racial and democratic South Africa is a distant idea now only found in ANC documents from the 1980s.

This week Zille should have realised that her tweets and her writings were adding to the noise, not the solution. She should have realised that she was pleasing a small minority of her supporters (not everyone in the DA holds her views) at the expense of a much bigger picture: a South Africa at ease with its past and its polyglot and diverse racial landscape.

This week Zille proved she was not a leader for the future. She was small, parochial, unable to grasp the real challenge of our future. She defended her small corner. She defended a tweet, not a great, encompassi­ng, idea of society.

That is not the cloth that the Nelson Mandelas of this world are cut from.

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