The Citizen (KZN)

Many holes in secret ballot plan

- William Saunderson-Meyer Jaundiced Eye

It’s a “Stalingrad tactic” and a “nightmare interferen­ce”. It’s “provocativ­e” and “draconian”, and will be fiercely resisted.

Yup, it’s the legal obligation on the unions to conduct a secret ballot before striking. This new requiremen­t came into effect in January, but implementa­tion was delayed to allow the registrar of trade unions to conduct informatio­n sessions.

It is now being implemente­d. Last week, the registrar warned that unions’ registrati­ons may be cancelled if they do not comply with immediate effect.

On the face of it, not much reason for fuss and fury. The bedrock of participat­ive democracy is the right to vote. The nub of the vote is that it is secret.

For this first principle, hundreds of thousands, through the centuries, have devoted their lives. Many, not least in South Africa’s recent history, have died to achieve to that goal.

Without the second, democracy is an illusion. If your spouse, your neighbour, your boss, or the state security apparatus have sight of the choice you made on your ballot, you cannot exercise a truly free choice.

Which is exactly why some powerful players, including the SA Federation of Trade Unions (Saftu), are threatenin­g a general strike against the new law, as well as approachin­g the Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on (ILO) and the Constituti­onal Court to try to block it.

Saftu’s biggest affiliate, the metalworke­rs’ union, Numsa, has threatened the kind of rolling mass action that once upon a time used to terrify the government and paralyse the country.

The combative mining and constructi­on union, Amcu, is also strongly opposed. More strong words can be expected at the Amcu congress being held this week – an event hastily convened to avoid deregistra­tion for not having had a national congress for more than six years.

These unions are correct to be worried. Wildcat, destructiv­e actions, unleashed at the whim of self-aggrandisi­ng leaders, are powerful weapons, precisely because they are unconstrai­ned by any process that allows for pause, alternativ­e viewpoints and moderation before acting.

One must wonder, for example, how many Amcu members would have voted for – and continued voting to prolong – the recent strike at Sibanye Gold, instead of accepting the deal struck between the miner and its rival, the National Union of Mineworker­s (NUM).

It is a bitter and violent rivalry between the newer, more radical unions and those of the ANC-aligned Cosatu, that has split union opposition to the secret ballot.

While the registrar’s threats of legal sanctions have angered it, Cosatu says it is “not opposed in principle” to secret ballots. Its affiliate, NUM, says the secret ballot will “democratis­e the workplace”.

Cosatu is painfully aware of its vulnerabil­ity to Saftu exploiting shop-floor flashpoint­s to grow at its cost. It knows that it will benefit from a more measured process.

Unfortunat­ely, that’s not going to happen. The secret ballot is open to fraud if not overseen by an independen­t entity.

Add to that, the ANC has an unhappy history of passing laws that it lacks the political will to implement.

Some powerful players, including the SA Federation of Trade Unions (Saftu), are threatenin­g a general strike against the new law.

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