Daily Dispatch

Race – Mmusi’s big challenge

- CLAUDI MAILOVICH Claudi Mailovich writes for Business Day

BEING the DA’s first black leader was never going to be easy, especially in a party trying to maintain its traditiona­l voter base – largely white and middle class – while convincing black citizens that it is a viable option to lead SA.

Campaignin­g before being elected DA leader in 2015, Mmusi Maimane said he did not agree with people who said they did not see colour, “because if you don’t see that I’m black, then you don’t see me”.

He added that his skin colour did not define him and that SA’s politics must never again be allowed to degenerate into a contest between races. “Instead, it must be a battle of competing ideas,” he offered.

Addressing the DA federal congress in April, where he was reelected, he recalled that 2015 speech, saying: “The flipside of this is also true. If all you see is that I am black, then you equally don’t see me.”

At that congress the so-called “battle of ideas” was fought and a new value, which was championed by Maimane, was adopted by the party. That value was diversity.

The party proclaimed it would take “active steps to promote and advance diversity in its own ranks”. Unlike many other political parties in SA that have committed to diversifyi­ng their public representa­tives on race, gender and age lines, the DA did not spell out what it meant, other than it “recognises the right of each individual to be who they want to be, from domination by others [sic]”.

Depending on who you spoke to, the “active steps” to be taken were seen as one of the biggest victories at the congress, despite not spelling out what exactly these would entail.

Delegates who feared the clause would be a way of getting race and gender quotas in through the back door celebrated their victory as the DA made rejecting quotas part of its constituti­on.

The outcome did not quell the longsimmer­ing debate in the party. The issue was already in the spotlight before the last delegate had left the venue in Tshwane.

At the new leadership’s first media briefing, spokeswoma­n and deputy federal chairwoman Refiloe N’tsheke was asked how she felt about being the only female leader in the DA’s top national structures.

Maimane replied that he wanted more female leaders.

Since its formation, the DA has continuall­y been accused of being a white party representi­ng white interests and of not being representa­tive enough in its senior leadership positions and parliament­ary caucus.

The accusation­s have not muted since Maimane’s election, and continue despite seven of the DA’s provincial leaders being black and its public representa­tives becoming increasing­ly diverse.

He faces pressure from outside the DA and within on the diversity issue.

He walked straight into the firing line after he proclaimed in his Freedom Day address in Soshanguve that “white privilege and black poverty” must be confronted.

City Press reported that DA deputy chief whip Mike Waters, chief whip John Steenhuise­n and MP Natasha Mazzone were critical of his comments, citing fears the party would lose the support of white voters ahead of the 2019 national elections – a massive test for the party, which aspires to win Gauteng.

The issue was addressed by Maimane at the DA’s federal executive meeting at the weekend.

A senior DA leader who supports Maimane says the “attack” on him comes as party leaders feel threatened about their political futures.

Most politicall­y active South Africans accept the notion of white privilege as a fact.

They understand that decades of white privilege came at the expense of black economic advancemen­t.

But the DA’s black leader was attacked for conveying these notions.

It is, however, not the political future of individual­s that hangs in the balance as the DA’s internal battles make their way into the public domain.

As Maimane surely knows, optics matter in SA politics, especially race and identity politics.

Right now the optics, regardless of the context, do not look good for a party that wants to be a home for all in SA.

Of the three women punted on DA elections posters in 2014, two are no longer with the party. Patricia de Lille’s membership was revoked on Monday after a lengthy and ugly battle. Lindiwe Mazibuko, once touted as a possible DA leader, resigned after the 2014 elections.

On Tuesday Nt’sheke sat in silence at the media conference when the DA announced the terminatio­n of De Lille’s membership, while Mazzone effectivel­y ran the show, reinforcin­g to some the perception that black DA leaders are puppets.

Tshwane mayor Solly Msimanga narrowly lost out to Athol Trollip in a contest to become the DA’s federal chairman. But leaders such as Makashule Gana, the DA’s Gauteng premier candidate hopeful, say the party is not in crisis, but merely grappling with the issues regular South Africans struggle to define.

The biggest test, however, is how the DA will navigate and emerge out of this turbulent maelstrom of race and identity politics, which it claims it does not prescribe to at all.

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