The Citizen (KZN)

FF+ growth stymied by its ‘saturation’

- Marizka Coetzer

While Freedom Front Plus (FF+) supporters hope the party will surprise many of its political rivals, analysts say its support is saturated, especially after the Multi-Party Charter deal.

The FF+ celebrated its 30th year and launched its 2024 manifesto at the Heartfelt Arena in Centurion at the weekend.

According to the Electoral Commission of South Africa (IEC) dashboard, the FF+ is one of four parties that increased its seats in the National Assembly and won 10 seats in 2019 – a 60% increase from 2014.

In the 2006 local elections, it won about 800 votes in Soweto and added its first black representa­tive in Bela-Bela in November 2022. FF+ leader Dr Pieter Groenewald said during his address at the manifesto that the party would focus on rebuilding SA, rebuilding the economy through investors and job creation, tax reductions and getting rid of Broad-based Black Economic Empowermen­t (B-BBEE) and affirmativ­e action.

North-West University lecturer Dominic Maphaka said it was not surprising to hear that the FF+ wanted to get rid of B-BBEE and affirmativ­e action.

“The FF+ and the Democratic Alliance (DA) have been very critical of the ANC’s race-based affirmativ­e action policies.

“This conservati­ve stance serves them well because it responds to their constituen­ts, who share the same view,” he said.

“The reality on the ground has shown that this stance has worked for them in the 2019 general elections,” he said.

“The stance saw the party drawing white conservati­ves who defected from the DA due to its unclear stance on affirmativ­e action. By then there were two DAs – Maimane’s pro-affirmativ­e action and Zille’s anti-affirmativ­e action factions, respective­ly.”

Maphaka said the DA had corrected this since Maimane’s departure through an anti-racebased economic justice policy.

“The foregoing suggests that they [FF+] will be vying for votes with the DA that could possibly retain conservati­ve white voters.”

He said SA’s triple challenges of poverty, inequality and unemployme­nt could not be resolved without a race-based policy.

Political analyst Piet Croucamp said Groenewald had managed to change the image of the FF+ from a right-wing party to a conservati­ve party.

“We have seen in the past two elections the FF+ grow at the expense of the DA. That’s where they got their vote.

“Remember what happened in Schweizer-Reneke and some of the things said by the DA about the FF+? I think the DA targeted the FF+ deliberate­ly and the vast majority of South Africans are very conservati­ve.

“It’s possible the white vote, which was to a large degree conservati­ve due to Afrikaners, might swing between the DA and the FF+ depending on the person’s perspectiv­e,” said Croucamp.

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