Sunday Times

ZUMA TURNS LEFT

President takes radical stance on economy

- QAANITAH HUNTER

PRESIDENT Jacob Zuma has taken a hard line against financial institutio­ns, instructin­g ANC policymake­rs to introduce stringent new laws to force banks to sell stakes to black investors.

Zuma, speaking behind closed doors at the ANC policy workshop in Irene last week, also took a populist view on land, calling for its speedy redistribu­tion. The president also called for black people to take ownership of major sectors, including constructi­on.

Zuma’s comments appear to be in line with a campaign being run by his friends, the Guptas, on their media platforms.

The Gupta-owned ANN7 has intensifie­d its attacks on South African financial institutio­ns in the past few days.

The TV channel has been running an advert for a campaign dubbed “The New Age’s fight for financial liberation”.

Zuma’s stance is in line with the rhetoric of his backers, who claim there is a conspiracy driven by “Western forces” to have the president removed from power because he is fighting “white monopoly capital”.

His supporters in KwaZuluNat­al have adopted economic transforma­tion as a platform on which Zuma’s ex-wife Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma would campaign for the ANC presidency.

Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa is to be discredite­d as being beholden to big business.

Zuma was talking tough on policy as Ramaphosa returned from the World Economic Forum in Davos, where he sold South Africa as an investment destinatio­n by promising policy certainty and boasted about the country’s well-developed financial services sector.

But Zuma shocked many at the end of the ANC plenary session on the economy when he told the governing party’s subcommitt­ee on economic transforma­tion to rework proposals that had been presented at the two-day meeting. GUPTA FRIENDLY: President Jacob Zuma wants action against the banks PLOT TWIST: ANN7, whose owners are the centre of state capture allegation­s, is pushing a transforma­tion narrative

Party insiders say Zuma described the proposals presented by Deputy Economic Developmen­t Minister Madala Masuku as not radical enough.

“He said if you want to speak of the second phase of radical transforma­tion you can’t come with an apologetic approach,” said an insider who was at the meeting in Irene but asked not to be named.

“He [Zuma] mentioned banks and the constructi­on sector . . . he [asked] . . . why do you have a few white families who seem to be in charge of everything . . . He said we must be radical, and the discussion document must say how . . . we move to an economy owned by black people.

“He said the report must be ‘reversed’. He said it is not radical enough.”

Masuku said: “[Zuma] was saying we must unpack what is ‘radical’. When we say we are committed to radical change . . . What are we changing?”

Zuma’s detractors said he was being opportunis­tic.

“I think we are dealing with a man who is desperate to remain relevant. If indeed he holds these radical views, why didn’t he implement them all along?” asked a party leader who was also at the meeting and asked to remain anonymous.

Political analyst Daniel Silke said Zuma’s comments could be an indication that segments of the ANC would be more inclined to consider populist policies, particular­ly on land.

“The succession battle is not only personalit­y driven — it is [also fought] between those who are moderate and those who are more populist,” he said.

Enoch Godongwana, head of the ANC national executive’s sub-committee on economic transforma­tion, and his team had to rewrite their document after Zuma’s remarks.

Godongwana declined to comment to the Sunday Times on Zuma’s views.

Another party leader who was at the meeting said those present were shocked by Zuma’s input because the president had sat in the commission from Thursday to Friday and endorsed its draft report.

“I spent two days with him in the commission. The commission report went to plenary with Zuma’s full endorsemen­t.”

The commission had recommende­d the ANC conduct research on economic ownership and its origins.

The ANC did not finalise its economic policy proposals and faces the task of amending the National Developmen­t Plan, the party’s flagship policy from its last conference in 2012. TEAM SA: ANC KwaZulu-Natal chairman Sihle Zikalala, Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan and Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d

We are dealing with a man who is desperate to remain relevant

Zuma’s stance is a departure from the position he held in 2010, when he opposed moves by Julius Malema, who was ANC Youth League president at the time, for the party to adopt radical policies.

At the national general council that year, Zuma attended a commission on economic transforma­tion and blocked Malema’s policy proposals.

Insiders say Zuma is more comfortabl­e to speak his mind now because he is not seeking a third term as ANC president and has nothing to lose.

Bongani Ngqulunga, Zuma’s spokesman, referred the Sunday Times to the ANC.

Godongwana said the ANC was considerin­g many ways to address persistent economic problems, including unemployme­nt, poverty and inequality.

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