The Star Early Edition

ANC needs new blood

- DOUGLAS GIBSON

SPEAKER in the National Assembly Baleka Mbete announced recently she was ready to be the president of the ANC. She joined the aspirants who all coyly say they are humbled and honoured to be considered before scrambling backward and saying it is not appropriat­e to discuss the leadership of their party just yet. Orders from on high.

And then “on high” breaches the same diktat and goes on to endorse, or virtually endorse, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, the mother of around twenty percent of his children.

He also berates the aspirants for announcing their readiness to serve. He then adds that it is time for a woman president, and praises Dlamini-Zuma.

This painful process seems set to go on for the rest of this year until the ANC elective conference last month.

My two grandchild­ren aged two love to hide behind the curtain or the door, be the subject of a search with the searcher asking: “Where’s Keira? Where’s Thomas?” Before they squeal with delight at being found.

The goings-on of the geriatric aspirants in the ANC remind me of the grandchild­ren playing games.

Every one of the declared (or if you prefer it, undeclared) candidates for ANC leadership qualifies for an old age pension.

In a country with the vast majority of the voters being young, the credible aspirants all seem too old.

Why don’t some of them go ahead and retire? The Americans have just inducted their oldest president in history, probably encouragin­g our aged to stay in the race.

The lure of high office in the ANC is so attractive because the candidates and the commentari­at all seem to believe that the next stop is the Union Buildings.

For a full generation, the ANC has been a shoo-in to win every election and most people cannot conceive of any other outcome in 2019.

They overlook the fact that no-one, repeat, no-one, would have predicted five years ago that Solly Msimanga, Athol Trollip and Herman Mashaba would be the mayors of Tshwane, Nelson Mandela Bay Metro and Joburg, respective­ly.

What happens if Mmusi Maimane is the next incumbent of the Union Buildings, perhaps as the head of a DA-led coalition government? If the ANC vote falls to below 50percent, that could happen.

South Africa would then have its youngest president ever – Maimane is 36 years old. The president of the ANC would then be leader of the opposition.

In considerin­g who it wants as its next leader, the ANC ought to be thinking about this possibilit­y.

Every democracy needs a good and effective opposition. A government with a weak and poor opposition can too easily go off the rails. People who assume power are under a great temptation to think they will be there, and perhaps even should be there, forever. We know that President Zuma feels the government will (and should) remain in power until Jesus returns and sees nothing wrong in repeating the statement, not caring whether he gives offence to Christians in the process.

Arrogance like that turns voters off and being human, even a new government might at some stage fall prey to the same hubris.

This is why a vigorous, highly motivated, well-briefed and well-led opposition is essential to the further democratic developmen­t of our country.

Some believe that the gold standard for opposition was set by Tony Leon and his “magnificen­t seven” MPs from 1994 to 1999. (Disclosure: I was one of them). It will be recalled that the ANC still enjoyed the moral high ground internatio­nally and had not yet decayed and deteriorat­ed internally.

The constituti­on provided for the next biggest party, the National Party, polling 20 percent of the votes, to get a deputy president and membership of the cabinet.

The third biggest party, the IFP, polling 10 percent of the votes, was entitled to some seats in the cabinet.

The Freedom Front, the fourth biggest party, served the interests of a fraction of one section of the white population and could in no sense be the leader of the opposition thought and action. It was thus left to the Democratic Party, forerunner of the DA, under a new, untried 37-year-old Tony Leon, with only 1.7percent of the voters supporting it, to be the real opposition.

Former president Nelson Mandela wanted Leon in the cabinet, agreeing he could say what he liked inside but would have to defend it outside. Leon declined.

This was a seminal moment in post 1994 history: he and his party believed that the country needed a proper opposition much more than it needed a bigger government. The DP went on to make opposition, even opposition to Mandela, respectabl­e and establishe­d the idea that a firm underpinni­ng of principled opposition is essential to our constituti­onal democracy.

Can anyone seriously see Mbete filling that role with any credibilit­y?

I think she would be lousy at the job. Or Ramaphosa? Or Dlamini-Zuma? Or Mantashe? Or Mkhize? The next generation of leaders, Minister of Home Affairs Malusi Gigaba and Minister of Sport and Recreation Fikile Mbalula fill one with gloom.

They are simply not up to it. Don’t even mention the current ANC Youth League president, Collen Maine, nicknamed Oros.

The ANC needs a good long period in opposition to find its soul again; to find policies that will resonate with the voters and be relevant to this century.

It must grow new leaders, get rid of the corrupt, the careerists, and the bandwagon climbers who drag it down.

Pity they don’t appear to have a leader of the opposition in waiting. Or do they?

Now is the time to haul out someone young with energy, brains and capacity who can be a match for Mmusi Maimane and Julius Malema.

 ??  ?? UNIMPRESSI­VE: Should ANC chairperso­n and Speaker in the National Assembly Baleka Mbete become president of the ANC, she would be lousy at it, says the writer.
UNIMPRESSI­VE: Should ANC chairperso­n and Speaker in the National Assembly Baleka Mbete become president of the ANC, she would be lousy at it, says the writer.

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