The Citizen (Gauteng)

Veterans want 1 member, 1 vote

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ANC leaders should be voted for through a “a one member, one vote” method, the party’s stalwarts and veterans said in their proposal for rebuilding the deeply divided governing party in South Africa.

The elders held a consultati­ve conference over the weekend, declaring that the party electoral system needed to be wholly reviewed. “An electoral review commission must be establishe­d for regular review of our electoral system. The Independen­t Electoral Commission must handle our elections, the ANC president and chairperso­ns must be directly elected by one member, one vote.”

A further proposal was that the integrity commission, establishe­d in 2013 following a resolution at its 2012 Mangaung conference, be an independen­t structure that can act without influence from leaders. The conference agreed the commission submit its reports directly to the national executive committee (NEC) for implementa­tion. The integrity commission is headed by former Rivonia triallist Andrew Mlangeni.

As part of rebuilding the party image, the commission was formed to tackle matters where ANC members are accused of improper conduct. Deemed toothless for being unable to effect recommenda­tions, the commission has previously recommende­d President Jacob Zuma (pictured) resign. He had reportedly refused to do so at a meeting with the commission in 2016.

The recommenda­tion arose from Zuma’s decision to fire former finance minister Pravin Gordhan, which the commission said “disregarde­d the principle and tradition of collective leadership”.

The stalwarts said they believed that the 105-year-old party can be saved. “We acknowledg­e that our failure to address these issues timeously has contribute­d towards the damage of the ANC’s reputation. We are, however, convinced our movement, through introspect­ion can self-correct and be rescued from its current crisis.” – ANA

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