The Citizen (Gauteng)

ANC’S DARK HORSE

Former ANC deputy president Kgalema Motlanthe’s name is being bandied about as a compromise candidate to lead and unify the party as he is not aligned with any faction. But he is downplayin­g the notion.

- Eric Naki – ericn@citizen.co.za

‘Everybody must be elected, the members must elect, members must nominate.’

Former ANC deputy president Kgalema Motlanthe has been identified as a crucial dark horse in an attempt to break the impasse in the fierce battle to secure the top spot in the up-coming party national elective conference.

This as some party die-hards suggested that to deal with the pending log jam regarding who of the seven presidenti­al hopefuls could qualify as a unifying figure in December, an untainted leader with no alignment to any of the existing factions should be identified.

They said Motlanthe, who is not in the running, was an ideal candidate to unify the party and the country in general and had the potential to restore party dignity and prevent it from losing the 2019 general elections.

Yesterday, Motlanthe neither confirmed nor denied whether he would accept if approached by branches on the conference floor to avail himself as a compromise candidate.

Some suggested that he was the best choice as an impasse breaker because both sides have high regard for him. They said he was free of scandal and that he tasted the presidency when he became the country’s leader when Thabo Mbeki was recalled by the ANC prior to Jacob Zuma’s installati­on.

But Motlanthe, in an interview with Saturday Citizen in Johannesbu­rg yesterday, played down the suggestion, saying “it had no basis”. He wants all leaders to go through a democratic process of nomination and election at conference.

“No, no, there is no basis for that at all. There has to be procedures. Everybody must be elected, the members must elect, members must nominate. The main thing is the elections are an instrument for strengthen­ing the organisati­on, not for dividing or weakening it,” Motlanthe said.

Observers say none of the seven candidates was unaffected by factionali­sm, including their previous and current contributi­ons to the tensions. There is also fear that the current contest was marred by tribalism, a factor that the ANC despised throughout its 105-year history.

Tribalism reared its ugly head within the party prior to the 2007 ANC Polokwane conference when the Jacob Zuma campaign was run on the basis of him being a Zulu and calls for the Xhosas to give way to others. This was clearly a reference to the fact that Xhosas like Nelson Mandela and Thabo Mbeki had been in charge since 1994.

Clearly now, others within the party, albeit subtly, have been calling for the Zulus to move over and allow the Vendas to rule, a reference to Ramaphosa. But Motlanthe, although he is a Peddie from Limpopo and lived in Gauteng, was never associated with tribal tensions.

A leading ANC member said each of the seven presidenti­al candidates, including party treasurer-general Zweli Mkhize, who is touted as a Zuma’s secret weapon as his alternate candidate, were compromise­d by their closeness, or acrimony towards the party troublemak­er, Zuma.

Political analyst Andre Duvenhage said it should not be surprising that the Motlanthe name was coming to the fore as he was long rumoured to be a hidden candidate in the race.

“According to my sources, Motlanthe was part of the contest since about a year ago but he was advised to stay away until the right time,” said Duvenhage.

The strategy was for Motlanthe to emerge at the last minute as a disinteres­ted party, untouched by the leadership conflict, something that would help him to appeal to both camps as an ideal unifier.

However, the analyst said he feared that there was little room for Motlanthe at this point. “There is a bit of momentum behind Zweli Mkhize. Remember, we are entering a phase where the power bases are being defined towards December,” he said.

There is a bit of momentum behind Zweli Mkhize. Remember, we are entering a phase where the power bases are being defined, towards December.

Andre Duvenhage Political analyst

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