Sunday Times

DA, EFF in ‘secret talks’ to beat ANC in local poll

Parties to fight separately but coalitions also a possibilit­y

- JAN-JAN JOUBERT

SEVERAL opposition parties are in initial, informal discussion­s to create a united front to unseat the ANC in as many municipali­ties as possible in this year’s local government elections.

Leading figures in four opposition parties, including the DA and EFF, confirmed the talks to the Sunday Times.

However, the United Democratic Movement — which may end up being the kingmaker in Port Elizabeth’s Nelson Mandela Bay metro — is not part of the discussion­s. “No one has contacted us about any discussion­s. We will decide on coalitions after the election,” said UDM leader Bantu Holomisa.

EFF leader Julius Malema this week publicly called for opposition coalitions, and DA spokeswoma­n Phumzile van Damme confirmed yesterday that DA leader Mmusi Maimane had had “some very informal discussion­s with other party leaders about this [coalitions]”.

Such a front will be based on practical solutions aimed at “stopping the rot” in municipal basic services that has ignited protests throughout the country. Its extent and structure has yet to be negotiated.

In response to President Jacob Zuma’s assertion that the ANC comes first, it has been suggested that the united front operates under the banner “Putting South Africa first”.

The proposal is for each opposition party to contest elections separately and for the exact nature of coalitions to be negotiated in every municipali­ty in which the ANC loses.

Where a single opposition party attracts more than 50% of the vote, as the DA is expected to do in Cape Town, no coalition will be formed, lessening the

It’s an opportunit­y for people to show the ANC that they are tired

danger of smaller opposition parties being gobbled up by larger ones.

The initiative for opposition unity was launched by the EFF, which has for months tried to reach out to other opposition parties, opposition leadership figures confirmed.

On Thursday, EFF leader Julius Malema used an interview with Reuters news agency to publicly call on other opposition parties to unite with the EFF to break the ANC’s strangleho­ld on power in the local government elections.

“It is an opportunit­y now for South Africans to show the ANC that they are tired; that the ANC should begin to take them seriously, ahead of the national elections in 2019,” Malema said.

The main obstacle to opposition unity has been the EFF’s radical rhetoric, parliament­ary behaviour, racially divisive language and extreme policies, DA leaders told the Sunday Times.

The DA was initially loath to work with the EFF, and the party is still debating the issue, DA insiders have said.

Sceptics of coalitions say they only work if the parameters are clear and if there is a national dispute resolution mechanism with an opt-out clause, managed by national leadership figures of participat­ing parties.

“The debate in the DA is between those who want to unseat the ANC and give coalitions a whack, and those who believe the EFF to be inherently corrupt and do not want the DA to be tainted by associatio­n, as it was by the shenanigan­s in the Cape Town city council after 2000,” a key DA player said yesterday.

“If we can deliver a coalition like Cape Town in 2006 under Helen Zille, I’m for it. If we deliver one like Cape Town in 2000 under Peter Marais, I’m against. Winning through coalitions is great, but then what? What happens afterwards is important. That is where voter trust is won or lost.”

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