Sunday Tribune

Julius Malema is a political chameleon

My View

- Imraan Buccus

JULIUS Malema is a real political chameleon. There are times when he has skirted perilously close to outright fascism and times when he has sounded like a liberal Constituti­onalist. But at heart he is an authoritar­ian populist and an ethnic entreprene­ur.

Prior to the breakdown in his relationsh­ip with Zuma, he was a central player in bringing Zuma to power. He has a history of complicity with forces who wreaked much damage on our country.

Malema has often made outrageous and deeply right wing statements, particular­ly on matters relating to gender. He has also regularly made statements that are simply a matter of bigotry, rather than anti-racist. He has conducted himself in a highly authoritar­ian manner with regard to the media, part of the lifeblood of democracy.

Malema, and the EFF as a whole, do not engage in democratic forms of debate. As Steven Friedman recently noted, the party tends to respond to criticism with insult and character assassinat­ion rather than debate.

The EFF has enjoyed very little support in Durban and some of the people who have joined the party in this city are very dubious.

In this context it was a bold move for the EFF to stage a rally at Curries Fountain. However, Malema did not use the occasion to take his audience into a progressiv­e position.

Instead of denouncing exploitati­on in general he denounced exploitati­on by Indian bosses. Instead of denouncing the intersecti­on of capital and politics, he denounced the intersecti­on of Indian capital and politics. This is the classic logic of fascism. If we replace “Africans” with “Germans” and “Indians” with “Jews” this quickly becomes clear.

We must make no mistake, there is real racism within the Indian community. There has also been a long-term project by some Indian intellectu­als and politician­s to deny this. The fact that many Indians played a committed role in the antiaparth­eid struggle has often been misused to paint all Indians as committed anti-racists.

However, to present the problems of class and capital as if they were particular­ly Indian issues is outrageous. Bosses of all races exploit their workers. Capitalist­s of all races try to use their wealth to win influence over the state.

The EFF has relatively minor electoral support. Most South Africans refuse its authoritar­ianism and chauvinism. However, it does have huge media attention. The reason for this is that the media, all in a desperate hunt for “clicks”, is attracted to sensationa­lism. But this hunt for “clicks” amplifies the space given to demagogues and is part of the reason why Trump won the American presidency.

It is vital that our media commit to democratic principles and to serious analysis and critique. Richard Poplak of the Daily Maverick has rightly been described as offering reportage of the EFF that is “amoral”. He writes as if the spectacle of Malema’s demagoguer­y, sometimes Constituti­onalist and sometimes skirting fascism, is a kind of entertainm­ent. But people like Malema, or Trump, are political actors and need to be engaged as such.

In both cases Malema and Trump speak to real grievances and real pain. But they both do so via demagoguer­y that scapegoats minorities instead of addressing structural issues that cause social suffering.

At the moment there is no genuine progressiv­e alternativ­e for voters. The DA is pro-business, neo-liberal and unable to tackle racism head-on. The ANC, in large part, is captured by a form of corrupt nationalis­m. The EFF offers an authoritar­ian populism as an alternativ­e, one that is often complicit with dangerous chauvinism.

Curries Fountain is where Cosatu was launched in 1985. It is where activists, like Strini Moodley and Saths Cooper, worked with others to hold the famous pro-frelimi rally in 1974. It is a place with a political history of Indians and Africans standing together against colonialis­m and apartheid.

If we remain on the capitalist road, more demagogues and opportunis­ts will arise to exploit the crisis for their own interests. The only real road out of our crisis is a genuine path to socialism, to economic democracy.

Imraan Buccus is senior research associate at ASRI, Research Fellow in the School of Sciences at UKZN and the academic director of a university study abroad programme on political transforma­tion.

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