Mail & Guardian

Slates bargain for top six

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egates will go down to the wire. The province is known to have supporters of Ramaphosa, Dlamini-Zuma and Zweli Mkhize, but its chairperso­n David Mabuza’s influence could determine who delegates vote for.

Provincial secretary Mandla Ndlovu said, out of the 471 branches eligible to go to the conference, only 12 branches have yet to hold branch general meetings.

“We are in the process of finalising the numbers and rounding up the final stages,” he said.

As it stands, of the 459 branches that have completed their nomination processes, 187 nominated Ramaphosa, 174 Dlamini-Zuma and 98 nominated “unity”. “Unity” is perceived to be a sign of loyalty to Mabuza.

Both Dlamini-Zuma and Ramaphosa were in the province campaignin­g over the weekend.

KwaZulu-Natal

There are more than 100 disputes in KwaZulu-Natal over the convening of branch meetings and nomination­s. Regional secretarie­s claim Dlamini-Zuma holds a commanding lead. A total of 806 branches are due to go to the conference and nearly 500 branches have nominated her, according to her backers in the regions.

But Ramaphosa’s lobbyists said, once the ANC’s dispute resolution committee hears their complaints, some nomination­s may be reversed to favour the ANC deputy president.

Eastern Cape

The Eastern Cape’s support has already been decided, with Ramaphosa securing a provincial endorsemen­t and the majority of nomination­s from the branches.

Three regions — Joe Gqabi, Nelson Mandela and Amathole — were expected to provide the bulk of Dlamini-Zuma’s support in the province, but not all the branches have backed their regional leaders’ choice.

Slightly more than 600 branches have qualified to attend the conference and attempts by DlaminiZum­a’s supporters to split their loyalties have failed. Ramaphosa has received slightly more than 400 branch nomination­s, according to a senior source in the provin- executive commit- (PEC), with DlaminiZum­a holding the bulk of the remaining nomination­s.

A member of the newly elected PEC said “the branches are showing the middle finger to those three regions [that back the Dlamini-Zuma campaign,

cial tee and] this will be evident in the PGC [provincial general council] next weekend.”

Northern Cape

Ramaphosa has made a near clean sweep of the Northern Cape, where branch nomination tallies were confirmed at the province’s general council last weekend. Out of 165 branches,

Ramaphosa

received received 154 nomination­s. DlaminiZum­a received 11. “The PGC further resolved that the Northern Cape delegates will not be part of any grouping that seeks to disrupt the conference,” regional secretary Deshi Ngxanga said in a statement.

Western Cape

The Western Cape has nearly 40 branches that have not yet nominated a leader but Ramaphosa is likely to make a clean sweep in the province, with 120 of the 139 nomination meetings backing his campaign.

Dlamini-Zuma has so far received nine nomination­s, and Lindiwe Sisulu and Mathews Phosa have one each. But the branches with the biggest membership are now at risk of not making it to the conference.

“There’s a big possibilit­y that the big branches won’t make it. They’re struggling to get a quorum,” Western Cape secretary Faiez Jacobs said on Thursday.

North West

In North West, a total of 177 branches are said to have nominated Dlamini-Zuma and 157 have backed Ramaphosa. Nine of the 18 outstandin­g branches are being disputed.

Free State

Dlamini-Zuma is still in the lead in the Free State with about 133 branches nominating her and 86 nominating Ramaphosa. But Ramaphosa backers in the province have complained of nomination rigging and have lodged more than 30 complaints throughout the process.

“If the process can be fair in the Free State, we will get far more than 50% and Thabo Manyoni will be chair of the Free State, but unfortunat­ely there is a lot of manipulati­on,” said Raymond Sibambani, a Ramaphosa lobbyist in the province.

Gauteng

In Gauteng, Ramaphosa was nominated by about 350 branches. Dlamini-Zuma received 54 nomination­s.A number of objections have been lodged in the Ekurhuleni region, where many branches rejected the regional executive committee’s decision and Ramaphosa was nominated 75 times.

Dlamini-Zuma received only 25 nomination­s.

Limpopo

Limpopo has emerged as another Ramaphosa stronghold. He was nominated by about 315 branches and Dlamini-Zuma was nominated by 46. His support was strongest in his home region of Vhembe, where he was nominated by 109 branches. Dlamini-Zuma received only three nomination­s there.

 ??  ?? Gaining: Nkosazana DlaminiZum­a
Gaining: Nkosazana DlaminiZum­a

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