The Herald (South Africa)

ANC policies sideline the poor

- PEDRO MZILENI

Anyone who is emotionall­y and intellectu­ally connected to the plight of the marginalis­ed section of our society must have had a hard time listening to finance minister Tito Mboweni’s budget speech last week.

In this financial year, it will be more expensive for workers to travel between their homes and workplaces, VAT remains at 15%, the state-owned enterprise­s that should steer our transforma­tive and developmen­tal areas are going to be privatised, the workers in the public sector are being threatened with retrenchme­nts, children of apartheid victims are still being given loans by a black government instead of the free education they fought for and the corporate taxes on our oligopolie­s have been left untouched.

Politicall­y, the ANC has completely shifted its guiding compass from being concerned with resolving the national question to being worried about rating agencies.

The liberation of black people in general and Africans in particular from the triple cruelty of race oppression, class exploitati­on and gender discrimina­tion, through the transfer of the country’s wealth to the hands of the people as a whole, does not seem to be a priority of the ANC anymore.

The politics of the ANC are those of accommodat­ing and embracing market perception­s of its leaders.

A conservati­ve leader who speaks of neo-liberal growth, “clean governance” and ethical standards is accepted more than a leader who carries radical approaches to questions of wealth redistribu­tion.

Uninterrog­ated corruption accusation­s and sexual allegation­s are used as weapons to silence and dislodge any organisati­onal potential from the progressiv­e sector of our politics, to wage a worthy struggle for social justice underpinne­d by a unity of purpose.

The wedge driver is committed to three things:

● Make them constantly fight with one another to sustain their divisions;

● Constantly broadcast the market perception­s about their leaders in the negative to weaken their intellectu­al commitment and defocus them from the core programme; and ultimately

● Defeat them and, quite frankly, annihilate them.

These political characteri­stics of our discourse have made the ANC choose the easy way out, which is to donate its intellectu­al property to rightwing commitment­s as demonstrat­ed in Mboweni’s budget and Cyril Ramaphosa’s address to the nation.

The direction it has taken also demonstrat­es the class suicide that the deceased SACP and the lifeless Cosatu have committed by allowing their alliance leader to shift to the right without their critical scrutiny.

These signs have been selfinflic­ted on the party since the first decade of a post-apartheid SA wherein they all allowed factionali­sm, politics of the personalit­y cult, the raiding of government procuremen­t services and the defence of the constant violation of their founding values by their leaders.

These have all gone on for too long unattended.

Though the presence of the EFF has forced the ANC’s slight swing back to the left in terms of its lip service, it still does not seem that the question of the land, the mines and the Reserve Bank will be translated into any quantifiab­le action under the current business-orientated, masculine leadership of the ANC.

The right-wing decisions taken on Eskom, education, fuel and the minimum wage, and the attitude on the public sector workers have shown the lack of depth that the current leadership has when it is confronted with the commodific­ation of public goods. These structural problems do not require the upcoming national bourgeois elections that will put in office another class accountabl­e to the market.

The weaknesses of the western parliament­ary democracy are with us wherein the citizenry is forced to choose a government from a group of land thieves, sexists, tenderpren­eurs, conservati­ves, pensioners, capitalist­s, tribalists, fascists, rapists, racists, murderers and gatekeeper­s.

If anything, our society requires a citizenry that will see the democracie­s that exists in the alternativ­e spaces of our communitie­s.

The trigger rests with social movements created from the community’s urgencies and socioecono­mic solidariti­es that each of them carry.

The first episode of the 2015 #FeesMustFa­ll protests have demonstrat­ed the authentic power of a different organising that is underpinne­d by clearly defined strategies and objectives. These carry material conditions that produce a community leadership that is charismati­c, gender sensitive and militantly discipline­d.

It is these alternativ­e sites of power that are in the hands of the people that have the potential of pulling authority towards the concerns of the marginalis­ed.

It is the people’s workingcla­ss urgency that will deliver wealth redistribu­tion, free education, secured employment, state-subsidised healthcare, an affordable and interconne­cted public transport system, land expropriat­ion, a state bank, a public insurance company and a principled leadership.

Anything less would be the current leadership’s obsession with right-wing flirtation which is not only devoid of imaginativ­e ideas, but it is also a neo-colonial programme that is against the people’s Kliptown charter.

● Pedro Mzileni is a PhD sociology candidate at Nelson Mandela University.

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