Sunday Times

China to show ANC how to lure the voters

Ace praises one-party state’s ideas on building cadre loyalty

- By CAIPHUS KGOSANA

● Communist Party of China officials will train ANC communicat­ions staff ahead of next year’s elections.

After leading a large ANC delegation to China, secretary-general Ace Magashule told an election communicat­ions strategy workshop at Luthuli House this month that the party had a lot to learn from the Chinese.

“That is why they are bringing officials from the Communist Party of China to South Africa,” said an ANC official who attended the meeting.

ANC spokesman Pule Mabe confirmed the party was looking to China for assistance in sharpening its communicat­ions machinery.

But the move appeared to surprise party elections head Fikile Mbalula.

“Why would we look to China for propaganda when they are an undemocrat­ic state?” he asked.

Writing in the online publicatio­n ANC Today, Magashule said the party also planned to send 300 officials to the Communist Party leadership training academy, hoping they would be inspired by the Chinese emphasis on party loyalty and discipline.

The ANC is turning to the Communist Party of China to help oil its propaganda machinery ahead of next year’s elections.

The ruling party is bringing in officials from the CPC to train its communicat­ors on strategy and propaganda.

Speaking at an elections communicat­ions strategy workshop held at Luthuli House two weeks ago, which was attended by ANC and selected government communicat­ors, ANC secretary-general Ace Magashule said the party was looking at taking lessons from the CPC on sharpening its communicat­ions machinery.

Insiders who attended the meeting said Magashule, who spoke off the cuff at the workshop, told them the ANC was considerin­g bringing in the CPC officials before the list conference at which candidates for parliament and provincial legislatur­es will be selected.

“He said we could learn a lot from the Chinese on issues of strategy and propaganda; that is why they are bringing officials from the CPC to South Africa,” said an insider who attended the meeting, and asked not to be named.

It is not clear what lessons the ANC seeks to learn from China as the country is a oneparty state that is accused of human rights abuses. Under the CPC there is limited media freedom, with the state controllin­g mainstream media. Its propaganda machinery is aimed at brainwashi­ng citizens.

ANC spokesman Pule Mabe confirmed that the party was looking at the CPC for assistance but said it was not necessaril­y taking propaganda lessons from the Chinese.

“From time to time we do send cadres of the movement to the party school in China. The context through which the secretaryg­eneral was speaking was about the extension of those relationsh­ips, also making communicat­ors aware that a party school is going to be constructe­d in Tanzania, where he has gone as well.

“This was a broader reflection he was giving about experience­s that we can also draw from other countries as well on how they run their organisati­ons,” he said.

But elections head Fikile Mbalula said the ANC could learn nothing from the CPC in terms of propaganda and strategy.

“Why would we look to China for propaganda when they are an undemocrat­ic state?” he said. “Our relationsh­ip with China is about strengthen­ing ties in building a new world order.”

The ANC sent a large delegation to the CPC in June, led by Magashule.

The team included Mabe, national working committee and national executive committee members Nomvula Mokonyane, Ronald Lamola, David Mahlobo and Tony Yengeni, and ANC Women’s League secretary-general Meokgo Matuba.

Writing in the party’s online publicatio­n, ANC Today, Magashule says the CPC has agreed to accommodat­e 300 ANC cadres in its leadership academy for five years.

“The exchange programme includes holding political education sessions with some of their commissars inside our country,” Magashule writes.

Mabe said the partnershi­p with the Chinese would extend beyond the elections.

“I think it goes beyond elections. At all material times we must work towards building external and internal capacity to be able to communicat­e and carry forward the message of the ANC, because the biggest thing that any political party sells out there is its own ideas.”

He said the ANC was mostly inspired by the Chinese emphasis on party loyalty and discipline. “The emphasis of the Chinese is loyalty. If we achieve that in the ANC to build a greater sense of loyalty from amongst our own cadreship, loyalty to our own resolution­s of conference, loyalty to our own convention­s, loyalty to our own value system as an organisati­on; then we know it would not be difficult for us to carry forward the programme of leading society.”

The ANC also conducted a frank assessment of its electoral weaknesses at the communicat­ions workshop.

Elections co-ordinator Roshene Singh presented a draft 2019 elections strategy document that admits for the first time that the ANC could fall below 50% voter support and be forced into a coalition to remain in power. The document also suggests that the ANC could lose another province next year.

“Through our own weaknesses and negative tendencies, we have squandered the goodwill we enjoyed from voters [over] the past 24 years. We now face the possibilit­y of losing our majority support in most large cities and in much of the economic heartland of South Africa,” reads the document, which the Sunday Times first reported on.

It cautions that the ANC will have to do things differentl­y if it is to regain lost support, especially the youth and urban vote.

“Making promises that sound like more of the same will not be enough. Our usual broad message of service delivery, togetherne­ss and good future plans is beginning to sound hollow, even to the most fervent ANC activists.”

He said we could learn a lot from the Chinese on issues of strategy and propaganda

Insider

 ??  ?? ANC secretary-general Ace Magashule
ANC secretary-general Ace Magashule
 ?? Picture: Twitter ?? A powerful ANC delegation led by secretary-general Ace Magashule visited the Communist Party of China in June.
Picture: Twitter A powerful ANC delegation led by secretary-general Ace Magashule visited the Communist Party of China in June.

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