The Citizen (Gauteng)

Redesign of ANC top structure mooted

- Eric Naki

The ANC in the Northern Cape has proposed a radical redesign of top brass structures to enable the organisati­on to function smoothly and further suggested a presidenti­al commission to probe restructur­ing of provincial government­s.

The province decided at its special provincial general council at the weekend that the national executive committee (NEC) should be reduced to 40 members, instead of the current 80, while the national working committee (NWC) must be replaced by a task-oriented “revolution­ary council”.

Provincial secretary Deshi Ngxanga said the special provincial general meeting held in Kimberley this weekend proposed that the revolution­ary council report to the NEC quarterly.

The province further suggested a broader “top nine” leadership structure to replace the current top six officials.

Its position was in line with views expressed earlier in the political overview by ANC provincial chairperso­n Zamani Saul at the provincial general council. Saul questioned whether the NEC structure comprising the top six and NWC were appropriat­e for the party to function effectivel­y.

He said the current NWC setup was an “unnecessar­y appendage” and had no specific tasks.

“With the current challenges confrontin­g the movement, we need to consider restructur­ing the working committee into a revolution­ary council with taskassign­ed members,” Saul said.

The provincial general council adopted Saul’s suggestion­s that the revolution­ary council should comprise the party president, two deputy presidents, the secretary-general, three deputy secretary-generals, the national chairperso­n and treasurer-general.

He said the current provincial set-up was a “fiscus guzzler” that went against the ANC’s historic mission of a unitary state.

Saul added the question of radical economic transforma­tion would form part of the second phase of revolution after the National Democratic Revolution.

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