Sowetan

Mthembu says Gauteng will galvanise ANC work

Risk of losing state power a worry

- By Andisiwe Makinana

The ANC is worried about the possibilit­y of not winning the majority of votes in Gauteng in the coming elections.

The party is also concerned that its standing in the national poll is dropping.

“The polling worries us. That we are very low in Gauteng worries us greatly. We are very concerned, there is no way we cannot be concerned,” ANC chief whip Jackson Mthembu said yesterday.

But Mthembu remained confident that results from recent polls would galvanise and jostle the party’s faithful to work harder – and might force members to put aside internal faction fights and focus on winning over voters.

The aim was to win outright and avoid a coalition government in Gauteng, as coalition government­s had proven difficult elsewhere.

“It will jostle us. That’s what is good with this movement. When we are worried we even forget about our factions. You will see us at work when we are threatened with losing state power,” Mthembu said.

He said the party’s visibility was only starting now, and once it was in full force, polling outcomes may change to reflect a different picture.

He noted that the party was still in a better position than the 54% it received in the 2016 local government elections.

Mthembu said part of the plan was to go out to the people, including in Gauteng, and explain that it was dealing earnestly with matters that were of concern to them, including corruption.

He said the improvemen­t in poll outcomes would also depend on the ANC going to each and every house and admitting to the wrongs that it may have committed.

“We must show that we are dealing with those issues. We must prove that we are dealing with those issues and we think that we are doing so,” Mthembu said speaking to journalist­s following his party’s final caucus meeting before the May 8 general elections.

The meeting was addressed by President Cyril Ramaphosa, who thanked ANC MPs for the work they had done since May 2014.

Mthembu was forced to acknowledg­e that in the past five years, the party had committed errors. “And in the errors that we have committed we are very much sorry, but a commitment we make is that we will not repeat those errors; we have learnt from our own mistakes,” he said.

 ?? /MOELETSI MABE ?? Jackson Mthembu, ANC spokespers­on.
/MOELETSI MABE Jackson Mthembu, ANC spokespers­on.

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