The Citizen (KZN)

Independen­ts on the fringe

Financial burden of campaignin­g also hampers prospects, says analyst. ONLY BIG NAMES HAVE A SHOT IN PARTY-BASED ELECTORAL SYSTEM

- Eric Naki ericn@citizen.co.za

While independen­t parliament­ary candidates are vital for the country’s democracy, their cause will be undermined by unfriendly electoral regulation­s in the 2024 general elections, an expert says.

Also, said independen­t political analyst Daniel Silke, independen­ts may be on the ballot paper, but unless some big-name individual­s are fielded as standalone candidates they would not make headway because they will be overshadow­ed by the dominant political parties.

“I really do not think they will make the threshold to get to parliament. But, of course, time will tell if there will be more substantiv­e names to be put in the hat.”

Silke put the blame squarely on the embedded party-based electoral system, which undermined independen­ts and killed dynamism in the electoral system.

The system made it difficult for independen­ts to run because of a lack of financial and material resources and the fact that individual candidates must fend for themselves

in campaignin­g.

Independen­t candidates have been introduced for the first time in the national and provincial elections in the 2024 general elections. But political parties continued to dominate the political scene and public debates and the electorate had shown little interest in them.

“South Africa does not have a culture of independen­ts running

in elections. We have a more sophistica­ted party system that got bigger and bigger and more and more bloated with individual­s who believe they should launch their own political parties to get into parliament,” Silke said.

Many individual­s who launched political parties could have run as independen­ts. The proliferat­ion of political parties in the country had almost closed

out individual­s who wanted to run in the polls.

“With so many parties contesting the elections it has become difficult for anybody to stick their necks out of the party crowd. The over-abundance of political parties has created a crowded space and a lot of party noise and that makes it difficult for independen­ts,” Silke said.

Policy analyst and civil society activist Nkosikhulu­le Nyembezi said despite the difficulti­es, he expected independen­t candidates to raise diverse issues in their election manifestos and campaigns.

“Independen­ts will elevate the relevance and potency of a diversity of views in the eyes of voters, issues that resonate with communitie­s, including community-specific issues that political parties often overlook,” Nyembezi said.

Independen­ts would be able to discuss their views on national media, interactin­g with audiences of various groups that would not have heard of them or their views before.

“We expect those who win seats to help produce legislativ­e bodies that respect the nation’s opinions and challenge abuse of power through robust discussion and constituti­onal checks and balances,” Nyembezi said.

Silke said the limited votes offered to independen­t candidates undermined their cause as it was impossible for them to run a national campaign.

“The electoral regulation­s undermine the effectiven­ess of what could have been a more interestin­g election with more independen­ts.

“It’s a pity, because independen­ts add a further dynamic to our political scene,” Silke said.

Unless the electoral rules were reviewed and redrawn, independen­t candidates would remain largely sidelined despite the vital role they played in enriching the country’s democracy.

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