The Citizen (KZN)

DA crisis must be de-racialised

FALLOUT: NEO-LIBERALS RESISTING MODERNISAT­ION

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The political pandemoniu­m that has befallen the Democratic Alliance (DA) over the past week gave rise to an interestin­g intellectu­al wave in the country. It gave rise to a strong racialist perspectiv­e that seeks to racialise the current crisis facing the DA.

The proponents of this school of thought contend that the outcome of the recent federal congress council is a reflection of entrenched racism within the DA. The high-level resignatio­ns especially that of the Johannesbu­rg mayor Herman Mashaba followed by that of DA leader Mmusi Maimane give credence to this intellectu­al contention.

As a result, racial reductioni­sm is a dominant narrative in the media and unfortunat­ely, an alternativ­e view or antithesis is not permeating.

The purpose of this article is to deconstruc­t the dominant racial construct that seeks to explain the unfolding leadership crisis facing the DA. My point of departure is that the crisis facing the DA is a reflection of an ideologica­l implosion and sharpening of class contradict­ions from within. Therefore, there is a need to de-racialise the debate and unearth the deeper and underlying challenges that are propelling the DA crisis.

This implosion was bound to happen given the fact that the DA fundamenta­lly subscribes to neo-liberalism. In its quest to be representa­tive of all South Africans it took a conscious ideologica­l detour and attracted a sizeable number of the black people into its ranks. This is the DA’s political and electoral strategy that was unveiled in 2007.

Helen Zille as the then leader of the party implemente­d this strategy with great success. It was premised upon three cardinal pillars: attracting blacks into the DA, reducing the ANC majority in parliament and retaining the Western Cape.

To the DA’s credit, the strategy was implemente­d with precision and the party saw exponentia­l growth patterns. In 2009, it moved from 16.66% to 22.23% in 2014. During the 2019 general election, the DA slid back to 20.7% losing a mere 1.53 percentage points’ electoral support.

This is what broke the camel’s back and unfortunat­ely Maimane as a tall tree caught the strong wind.

The hard-core neo-liberals for too long were resisting the possible modernisat­ion of the DA fearing that it would metamorpho­sise into something like “diluted neo-liberalism”. That was an outcome that they were not willing to accommodat­e as it would signal the DA’s ideologica­l diversion from its core neo-liberal ideologica­l outlook.

Evidently, the hard-core neo-liberals were gradually pushing back Maimane’s modernisat­ion attempts. Central to Maimane’s modernisat­ion plan was to do away with political corporatis­m that is entrenched in the DA and often is in direct conflict with representa­tive democracy.

To Maimane’s disadvanta­ge, a new phenomenon of “Judasicari­otisim” started rearing its ugly head with some leaders denouncing his electoral strategy. Instead of taking a principled stance of collective ownership of the electoral decline, they used the organisati­onal review report to knock him down.

The time has arrived for a black liberal party to emerge from the ashes of the DA crisis if liberalism in its classical sense will have a place in the South African political landscape.

Zamikhaya Maseti is a political economy analyst and MD of Ngubengcuk­a Consulting

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