Mail & Guardian

Arise, indie poll hopefuls

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The picture of municipal finances presented by the auditor general this week is alarming. There has been some progress in the past year, but the basic problem remains: the overwhelmi­ng majority of local government­s are not working, and most may not be viable. These supposed drivers of service delivery are so broken that not even the nearly R1-billion spent on consultant­s to bring about financial order has had any measurable effect.

Yet, at ground level, there is a source of hope. This week, a great many independen­t candidates registered their intended participat­ion in the August local government polls. The battles between the regular parties will be fierce, but unaffiliat­ed candidates will have a key role to play. They will spend their own time, and sometimes money, canvassing their communitie­s. They will put their pride, and perhaps their reputation­s, on the line. In the case of those candidates who truly understand their communitie­s’ needs, we hope that the residents respond by electing them.

That would be a message no political party could ignore. There could be no clearer signal from voters that they put good management and effective delivery above all else — and that, if the formal parties do not get their houses in order, their representa­tives will be relegated.

As the election lists closed this week, trouble loomed. In several parties, notably the ANC, there were clear signs that patronage and internecin­e politics could prevent the best people from making it on to the party ballots. A strong showing by independen­ts could jolt parties into paying greater attention to their constituen­ts and making more effort to get municipali­ties working.

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