The Herald (South Africa)

Choices dismal for SA voters

- Justice Malala

UNLESS President Cyril Ramaphosa pulls a fast one on all of us and makes a dramatic announceme­nt soon, we are now exactly one year from the 2019 national and provincial elections. Who will win?

Sadly, our leading political parties seem to be working extremely hard to ensure voters are so disillusio­ned they will stay at home on the day.

The DA’s vaulting hypocrisy in dealing with its two leaders, Western Cape premier Helen Zille and Cape Town mayor Patricia de Lille, and their transgress­ions has unmasked it as a leaderless, spineless, unethical and tone-deaf entity that now undermines particular­ly the black constituen­cy it has attracted through its admirable stance against corruption.

Forget the appalling and outrageous “colonialis­m was not too bad” view itself – the failure of the DA to act against Zille for her shocking racial trolling on Twitter, her continued showing of the finger to the likes of Mmusi Maimane by constantly asserting her discredite­d “view” that colonialis­m had its positives, can only lead to one result and it is that putting an X next to the DA becomes impossible for many.

The party has also thought up and implemente­d a special law to get rid of De Lille.

The apartheid government came up with something similar to persecute and imprison just one man in the 1960s.

The Sobukwe Clause was enacted in 1963 by the apartheid government to arbitraril­y keep Pan Africanist Congress leader Robert Sobukwe in prison without charge, trial or any review.

It was apartheid at its most barbaric.

Everything about the DA’s “De Lille Clause” today reeks of the Sobukwe Clause.

Mmusi “They say I am Mandela” Maimane, if he really espouses what Madiba stood for, should be ashamed to be part of this lynch mob.

So that’s the main opposition party – wracked by racial bigotry and hypocrisy, happy to stand by Zille while she, week in and week out, taunts and puts embers in black people’s open sores about the cruelty and inhumanity of colonialis­m.

Then there is the EFF, the secondbigg­est opposition party in our constellat­ion.

The EFF is in bed with the DA in Tshwane and Joburg while it flirts with the ANC through letters.

What does it stand for when it is not “cutting the throat of whiteness”, as its leader tells us, or denigratin­g those who point out that its leaders’ behaviour is Mussolini-esque? Nothing. It is all very Shakespear­ean in the EFF – “It is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.”

The ANC is committing hara kiri – and voters can see it.

When Ramaphosa won the ANC presidency in December last year the party was given a new lease on life.

After years of dreadful decline, it suddenly had a real chance of turning around the years of sloth, corruption and ennui it had found itself mired in.

Yet, four months in, it is clear that the ANC is perhaps incapable of change and that significan­t chunks of the party have already started a “fight back” campaign to undermine Ramaphosa and the party’s last chance at salvation.

Unless Ramaphosa can still outsmart and outmanoeuv­re these elements, the ANC will continue with the decline it experience­d under Jacob Zuma.

Last weekend, Ramaphosa visited the eThekwini region in KwaZulu-Natal with other ANC national working committee members to try to assess progress being made with unifying the party there.

They slapped him in the face. The branch delegates to the meeting sang at Ramaphosa: “Uyenzeni uZuma?” (What has Zuma done?). Communicat­ions Minister Nomvula Mokonyane sang and clapped happily along.

Just two days before, Ramaphosa had arrived in the North West province to quell the violence that had erupted there.

While he met premier Supra Mahumapelo and others, a crowd of Mahumapelo-supporting ANC members had gathered outside, threatenin­g violence if the scandalsoa­ked premier was ousted.

The corrupt ANC wants Zuma back. The upstanding ANC is weak.

So, who to vote for? COPE’s Mosiuoa Lekota is flirting with the right wing while Bantu Holomisa of the UDM has gone deathly quiet.

The IFP clings on to its “leader for life”, Mangosuthu Buthelezi.

Poor voters. Our choices are so dire.

 ??  ?? UNDER PRESSURE: President Cyril Ramaphosa faces a tough task
UNDER PRESSURE: President Cyril Ramaphosa faces a tough task
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