The Citizen (KZN)

Zuma has last laugh

PARTY MUST PROTECT ITSELF AND KEEP UNITY, SO NO RECALL OF PRESIDENT

- Eric Naki – ericn@citizen.co.za

Preserving unity within ANC ranks and defending it against opposition parties were the main reasons the organisati­on decided not to recall President Jacob Zuma, says party secretary-general Gwede Mantashe.

Touch and go as majority of committee were undecided during the meeting.

Preserving unity within ANC ranks and defending it against opposition parties were the main reasons the organisati­on’s national executive committee (NEC) decided not to recall President Jacob Zuma, says the party’s secretary-general, Gwede Mantashe.

And the debate about Zuma’s recall may not have been the overwhelmi­ng victory his supporters have portrayed, because Mantashe revealed the majority of the NEC were undecided during the meeting.

At a media briefing in Johannesbu­rg yesterday, Mantashe said Zuma’s departure was discussed and that “a number of members of the NEC were of the view that the ANC should listen to this call”.

“Various contributi­ons in support of and against the appeal to the president to step down were raised. Many more were neither in favour nor against the appeal but emphasised the need for unity within the organisati­on.”

He said the NEC understood some calls for Zuma to step down – “especially those made by the opposition” – were not so much about removing Zuma, “but rather about dislodging the ANC from power”.

Political analyst Daniel Silke said the ANC was trying to keep itself united until its December elective conference. “It makes sense as they do not want to risk a ruction in the party with the conference six month ahead.”

Silke said the party was gambling that Zuma’s successor would be able to restore the organisati­on’s popularity by 2019.

“They fail to understand the public concern about Zuma and the whole brand of Zuma. The damage done is serious to the ANC and it will take someone who does not have specific ties to Zuma to rekindle the flames of the party,” Silke said.

But, he added, the party would find it “very difficult to restore public confidence in itself” at the 2019 polls, because its leaders had opted to put party, rather than state, interests first in not recalling Zuma.

Another analyst, Somadoda Fikeni, said the ANC was no longer united, but a divided organisati­on.

“Since the Polokwane moment, the ANC has been beset by a personalit­y power game. People tend to serve the person, rather than the organisati­on, with no care for party values or principle. They concentrat­e more on defending the leader than the party,” he said.

Fikeni said Zuma himself went into “survival mode” by creating perception­s that he was a victim of political persecutio­n by some individual­s in the party.

With its decision on Zuma, the ruling party figurative­ly showed a middle finger to the opposition parties, civil society and senior ANC members – including its own stalwarts and veterans who have been calling for Zuma to go.

The NEC did ask Zuma to appoint a judicial commission of inquiry into state capture – but gave it much broader terms of reference than the public protector’s report of last year.

Mantashe said the NEC recommitte­d itself to focus on inequality, poverty and unemployme­nt.

The governing party also in- structed Public Enterprise­s Minister Lynne Brown to ensure the reinstatem­ent of Eskom CEO Brian Molefe was rescinded.

Many more were neither in favour nor against the appeal but emphasised the need for unity

Gwede Mantashe ANC secretary-general

 ?? Picture: Yeshiel Panchia ?? SURVIVOR. President Jacob Zuma and Minister of Cooperativ­e Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs Des van Rooyen, right, arrive at the indigenous and traditiona­l leaders indaba at the Birchwood Hotel in Boksburg yesterday.
Picture: Yeshiel Panchia SURVIVOR. President Jacob Zuma and Minister of Cooperativ­e Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs Des van Rooyen, right, arrive at the indigenous and traditiona­l leaders indaba at the Birchwood Hotel in Boksburg yesterday.
 ?? Picture: Yeshiel Panchia ?? EXCUSES. ANC secretary-general Gwede Mantashe says President Jacob Zuma stays because the NEC wants to defend the party against the opposition.
Picture: Yeshiel Panchia EXCUSES. ANC secretary-general Gwede Mantashe says President Jacob Zuma stays because the NEC wants to defend the party against the opposition.

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