Mail & Guardian

‘The General’ in the running for JZ’s throne

Lindiwe Sisulu’s supporters say she’d be better for the ANC’s top job than Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma

- Matuma Letsoalo

Human Settlement­s Minister Lindiwe Sisulu could emerge as the dark horse in the race to succeed president Jacob Zuma as the next ANC leader. Her supporters said this week the campaign to have her take over the ANC’s top job when the party goes to its national elective congress in December is gaining momentum in ANC structures.

Her supporters are presenting her as an alternativ­e to former African Union Commission chairperso­n Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, who has been publicly endorsed by Zuma and the ANC Women’s League as the president’s successor.

Sisulu’s supporters agree with the call for a woman president but they disagree with the women’s league’s assertion that Dlamini-Zuma is the only one ready to lead the ANC, and the country, in 2019.

Several ANC branches, they say, have already indicated they want struggle stalwart Walter Sisulu’s daughter for president.

Unlike Dlamini-Zuma and other ANC presidenti­al candidates, Sisulu’s supporters say she is the most credible candidate and someone who can unite the party before the 2019 national elections.

They argue that Dlamini-Zuma’s associatio­n with Zuma and the Gupta family rules her out as a credible candidate. Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa is not the right person for the job either because of his alleged involvemen­t in the Marikana massacre.

The Marikana commission of inquiry cleared Ramaphosa, who was a Lonmin shareholde­r at the time, of playing a role in authorisin­g the killing of 34 miners on August 16 2012.

“To win the elections in 2019, the ANC needs someone like Sisulu, who doesn’t have any scandal to her name and does not belong to any faction in the ANC,” said one of her lobbyists, who asked to remain anonymous.

He added: “In 2019, South Africans will not vote for Marikana, they will not vote for the Guptas. They want a credible leader.”

Sisulu this week said she was not prepared to talk about succession until the ANC opened the debate later this year. But she agreed with the principle of a woman as president.

“I don’t know why it’s a debate. Women in the ANC have held senior positions [from] its inception. We don’t talk of Lilian Ngoyi in any lesser way than you would of Madiba. We have women of substance in the ANC.”

She said there is a process in place in the ANC, encapsulat­ed in its Eye of the Needle policy document.

“It details what kind of processes we must all go through in electing a leader. It’s a very rigorous process. We must stick to it.”

If that process is followed, the best person would emerge and that person would be a woman, she said.

“I firmly believe, let’s look for the right candidate. I firmly believe when we [the ANC] find the right candidate, it will be a woman.

“Not that we are looking for a woman. I am convinced that among the crop of people ready to lead this country is an equal number of men and ... women.”

She criticises the women’s league for publicly endorsing DlaminiZum­a despite the ANC national executive committee’s (NEC) decision not to do so. “I don’t know how the women’s league put itself in that

situation. We took very clear decisions at the last NEC that everybody will desist from this. It’s pitting one comrade against the other and the ANC is not about that. The last time we had this kind of situation was in Polokwane and the repercussi­ons were disastrous, as you know.”

Sisulu’s supporters believe her clean record in government and the experience she has gained since 1994 puts her in pole position.

“She has been in six different department­s — defence, intelligen­ce, home affairs, public service and administra­tion and human settlement­s. She understand­s the evolution of this government. All these are strategic portfolios. She knows South Africa in and out. She was the head of the intelligen­ce committee during Codesa [the Convention on a Democratic South Africa]. You had her in all these important portfolios. Why don’t you trust her?” the lobbyist said.

Described by some as “the general”, Sisulu is credited for having launched the school of government aimed at providing compulsory training for public servants.

She has also been praised for her efforts when she was the public service and administra­tion minister to push for the Public Administra­tion Management Bill, which aims to bar government officials from doing business with the state.

But it earned her some enemies in the government and the ANC.

Some Zuma supporters have questioned her loyalty, particular­ly after she allowed AngloGold Ashanti chairperso­n Sipho Pityana, known for his contempt for the president, to speak at the funeral of her husband Rok Ajulu.

Pityana, whom some have accused of being part of “white monopoly capital”, used the platform to lambast Zuma’s leadership style. Sisulu’s supporters said she did not invite

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa