The Citizen (KZN)

Mashaba eyes election win as crime buster

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ActionSA leader and former Joburg mayor Herman Mashaba, who calls himself proudly xenophobic, is eyeing victory in the upcoming general election as a candidate who can deliver law and order in the crime-ridden country.

A successful businessma­n, Mashaba is among a cohort of new small political party leaders seeking to capitalise on the broad discontent with the ANC, as South Africans head to the polls on Wednesday, 29 May.

After the “magic” years of Nelson Mandela, South Africa has gone from bad to worse, Mashaba said this week, citing widespread poverty, collapsing infrastruc­ture and a rampant murder rate.

“We are heading into a cliff in the event that we don’t mobilise South African voters to stop this country from being another failed African state,” said Mashaba.

The 64 year old made a fortune selling hair products for black people, a venture he started before the end of apartheid.

He appeals to part of the electorate as a blunt conservati­ve and a self-made man, who rails against ANC “communists” who “don’t believe in God”, and wants to do away with affirmativ­e action policies favouring black employment.

These should be replaced by a tax on companies’ profits and the money used to improve education in deprived areas and to offer cheap loans to black entreprene­urs, he said.

Tackling crime and illegal immigratio­n – both key issues amid high unemployme­nt – are also

among his party’s main priorities.

Mashaba advocates tougher punishment­s, including forced labour and stricter border controls.

As the head of South Africa’s largest city between 2016 and 2019, he often pointed the finger at foreigners, mostly from poor neighbouri­ng countries, leading to accusation­s of xenophobia.

“Anyone coming here for illegal intent... you are not welcome into South Africa,” he said.

“If anyone calls me xenophobic, then I’m a proud xenophobic.”

Mashaba was elected mayor with the main opposition party, Democratic Alliance (DA), but

left after falling out with its leadership over the handling of racial issues.

The DA has long struggled to shake off its image as representi­ng the white minority.

After forming ActionSA in 2020, he is now back in a coalition agreement with his former party, which he describes with little love as “better devils”.

The coalition, which includes other smaller groups, faces an uphill battle to unseat the ANC.

Struggling in the polls, the ANC risks losing its parliament­ary majority for the first time since 1994 – but is still set to win the largest share of the vote.

ActionSA won about 16% in 2021 municipal elections in Johannesbu­rg.

But it is untested nationally, where it is competing for the first time and analysts say ActionSA might struggle to repeat its success and expand outside its core black, middle class, urban electorate.

An Ipsos poll published last month put it at around four percent nationwide. But Mashaba is unfazed.

“I’m not distracted by people who smoke I don’t know what,” he said of pollsters.

“We’ve proven them wrong all the time.”–

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? UNFAZED. ActionSA leader Herman Mashaba says South Africa has gone from bad to worse.
Picture: AFP UNFAZED. ActionSA leader Herman Mashaba says South Africa has gone from bad to worse.

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