Sunday Tribune

Turning ANC goals into reality

The party has to come to terms with the dimension of conflict and antagonism, writes

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THE last 23 years of the ANC in government have taught us that it is one thing to start a revolution, another to win it, and still another to institutio­nalise it.

Institutio­nalising the revolution, translatin­g ideals into action, and turning hope into reality have been the goals of the ANC. However, hegemony has been difficult to achieve.

The ANC is confronted by a new basis for policy developmen­t, the radical transforma­tion of the state and society, the reconfigur­ation of the public sector, the establishm­ent of inclusive deliberati­ve structures linking diverse democratic struggles, and the inaugurati­on of a new political culture.

Such a task requires the creation of new ideologica­l positions that would allow the articulati­on of anti-racism, anti-tribalism, anti-sexism, antielitis­m, xenophobia, and anticapita­lism. These struggles do not spontaneou­sly converge.

In order to establish democratic equivalenc­es among them, a new “common revolution­ary sense” is necessary. This would transform the political identity of different movements so that the demand of each movement could be articulate­d with those of others according to the principle of radical democratic equivalenc­e.

For it is not a matter of establishi­ng a mere alliance or coalition between given interests, but of modifying the very ideologica­l identity of these circumstan­ces that struggles against neo-liberal capitalist power to become truly democratic.

While the ANC has grown more aware of the demands for strategic change, the public is concerned about the readiness of the organisati­on to respond.

The ability to handle the full implicatio­ns of fundamenta­l change is highly prized. All these have to take place against a knowledge economy which has become particular­ly volatile.

As the difficulti­es facing the ANC multiply, the electorate continues to analyse the pattern of the challenges involved, their causes and consequenc­es, and the most appropriat­e questions for deliberati­on.

Now, with the ANC policy conference in process, this is an excellent time to synthesise the questions, identify the potential challenges, and provide a framework for fundamenta­l change.

How can the ANC, an increasing­ly socialist movement, engage in a process of radical transforma­tion that would leave it in a position of significan­t political power, mindful of the considerab­le constraint­s on its ability to fundamenta­lly transform society along the lines that it spelled out in the Freedom Charter?

What persuaded the ANC to accept electoral democracy as the starting point for radical transforma­tion, instead of continuing to assume that revolution­ary transforma­tion is the appropriat­e point of departure?

What are the implicatio­ns for radical transforma­tion, given the fact that the apartheid enemy was not defeated?

Why did the ANC decide to demobilise the civil organisati­ons that contribute­d mightily to the decision to negotiate by the apartheid leaders?

How is the new, more liberal direction of Russia, a powerful ally, shaping its policies?

In which way does South Africa’s alliance with Brazil, Russia, India, and China – in the Brics constellat­ion – generate power relations that can address economic, social, geopolitic­al, and ecological challenges?

Why did the ANC shift from the Reconstruc­tion and Developmen­t Programme to Gear, and move the economy closer to neo-liberal orthodoxy?

What lessons can be learned from other liberation movements in Africa and Latin America that opted for a negotiated settlement – in Zimbabwe, Namibia and Uruguay?

And what can be learned from liberation movements that gained state power by force – in Cuba, Angola, Nicaragua, Eritrea, and Mozambique?

How different is the ANC’S political programme from those of other parties in Parliament with no revolution­ary history?

Does the movement for radical transforma­tion contain the basis of a political challenge that could lead to a reconsider­ation of its political trajectory?

What can be learnt from such coalitions in Latin America and the rest of Africa? What ideologica­l equivalenc­es and disagreeme­nts exist among political parties that are to be negotiated?

The destiny of the revolution­ary movement may lie in such coalitions. Perhaps the most tragic thing to contemplat­e and imagine is what is likely to come after the ANC and the liberation movement.

To answer these questions, the following criteria should be considered: the degree to which the ANC can abandon neo-liberal market rationalit­y and embrace socialism; decentrali­se power and adopt more inclusive decision structures; profession­alise the public sector; demarketis­e education and training; and curb corruption.

Other criteria would be to redistribu­te the economy under worker and social control; wrench power from corporatio­ns and their allied political and knowledge elites; adopt decommodif­ication, destratifi­cation, and deglobalis­ation strategies in all key sectors of the economy; mobilise overlappin­g consensus among the social movements that have emerged recently in response to neo-liberal policy failures; and provide leadership to the critique of neo-liberalism in various discursive fields.

The ANC needs to take seriously the social practices and discourses of neo-liberalism and the way in which these have become deeply entrenched in civil society, if it has to assist the public to understand the consolidat­ion of neo-liberal hegemony.

It has to take seriously the idea that various political struggles, which might be read as contestati­ons of neo-liberalism, should rather be seen as part of its evolution.

These challenges seem to have contribute­d to the simultaneo­us reproducti­on and transforma­tion of neo-liberal hegemony rather than its impending demise.

Far too little attention has been paid to the political dimensions of discourse communitie­s imagining, promoting and sustaining neoliberal­ism.

As much attention should be given to the ways in which larger political and economic structures, institutio­ns, and interests are connected to social relations in the realm of knowledge, ideas, and interpreta­tion.

It requires the ANC to historicis­e and materialis­e radical transforma­tion. This means understand­ing the history of the ANC as part of the history of ideas and liberation movements in Africa, Latin America, and globally.

Radical transforma­tion requires the ANC to reject market rationalit­y as well as oppressive hierarchie­s of knowledge, wealth and power.

The ANC has to come to terms with the dimension of conflict and antagonism, and has to accept the consequenc­es of the irreducibl­e plurality of values in a secular world.

This should be the starting point of the ANC’S attempt to radicalise the neo-liberal regime and to extend radical transforma­tion to a range of social relations.

The ANC must create the conditions under which those antagonist­ic forces can be defused and diverted and a truly inclusive democratic order made possible.

This is the work of generation­s now, under conditions not quite propitious and partly of our own making.

Nkondo is a member of the Freedom Park Council and Council of the University of South Africa. He writes in his personal capacity.

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