Sunday Times

EFF seizes the future through social media

- CHRIS KANYANE Kanyane is a civil servant. He holds an MBA in strategic management

The EFF is now one of the major political parties in SA, after the ANC and the DA. The ANC is 100 years old and the DA goes back to the ’50s.

The EFF is just five years old.

The EFF is able to exploit opportunit­ies to its advantage and arrest or deal decisively with potential threats.

The core of an MBA degree is educating students on these key business factors: exploiting business opportunit­ies while dealing with threats. These are the two factors in a Swot (strengths, weaknesses, opportunit­ies and threats) analysis. A Swot analysis is used to shape the success of a business, country, industry, product or person.

The EFF exploited and leveraged social media to dominate and direct the national discourse. Social media has helped the EFF mobilise and galvanise its messaging. EFF fighters on social media are creating and sustaining conversati­ons on the political, social and economic issues paralysing SA and are deploying spin to show how an EFF government would usher in an era of superb statecraft and surpassing leadership, to make the country a viable political enterprise.

The big deal is that the EFF is achieving subjective and maximum impact through social media.

The strength of the EFF is that it is a flexible organisati­on. It is not stifled by dogma and history like the ANC, nor finds itself obliged to deal with baggage like the DA. The EFF is forward-looking. The ANC is often backward-looking whereas the DA is inward-looking, mostly having to address internal contradict­ions and multiple personalit­ies.

The EFF forces on social media are not violent, as some seek to paint them. What they are is an attack force that marshals arguments to destroy all the canons of lies, hypocrisy, corruption, resource vandalism, and other appalling failures of the ANC.

The EFF forces are perpetuall­y roaming the social media savannah to shoot down damaging stories about their party. They are gifted novices, damage-limitation experts in defence of their movement. Without a doubt, social media is the EFF’s competitiv­e advantage. The radical politics the EFF pursues make it a pariah within the mainstream media. And so, a swarm of fighters has taken social media by storm.

Some EFF forces take to Twitter, many embrace Facebook, others communicat­e via WhatsApp and other social media.

Twitter is the centre of gravity for the EFF forces. They tell the story of an ANC that has fallen from grace and has no way of turning back. The ANC has entered a vegetative state and it is time that we unplugged all the life machines.

The election of President Cyril Ramaphosa as president was supposed to usher the ANC into some kind of a new dawn. But Ramaphosa’s search for political significan­ce in the depressing, chaotic politics of the ANC is turning into his nemesis. Ramaphosa seems to be a student of Machiavell­i. Machiavell­i recommende­d several things to politician­s, two of which were: 1. Duplicitou­s behaviour of sweet, slow, gentle talking, just to soothe the people (make them agreeable); and 2. On the surface, be like a leaf blown around by the wind — agree with all people.

However, there is something else. Ahead of Ramaphosa seem to lie tears, trouble and tattered reputation­s as his predecesso­r, Jacob Zuma, is threatenin­g to open a can of worms. Ramaphosa seems to be a pre-packaged failure.

The EFF is the new don of South African politics. It has brought freshness and creativity to our old politics of liberation. It is time this country moves forward and defines itself in the terms of the future and not the ANC politics of spinning endlessly: “Apartheid did this, and we fought apartheid.”

The EFF appears to be the party most concerned with the realisatio­n of the Nelson Mandela nation. The majority of people in SA find themselves forced to belong within a space that has no spirit-lifting storyline.

The thrust of the EFF, its sharp, unshakeabl­e focus, is about lifting the lives of these people. Theirs is to be a journey of remaking SA into a veritable, vital, and robustly healthy nation.

It has brought freshness and creativity to our old politics of liberation

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