Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Zuma must go to avert disaster for ANC at polls

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THE most remarkable thing about the ANC’s elective conference was not Cyril Ramaphosa’s victory – but how narrow the victory of the Old ANC over the Captured ANC was.

President Jacob Zuma’s Guptaalign­ed wing must be kicking themselves. Were it not for the failure of fewer than a 100 of the

4 776 delegates to vote for her instead of Ramaphosa, Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma would have triumphed.

There was another tipping point missed by the Captured ANC. Were it not for the exclusion by the courts of more than a 100 mostly proDlamini Zuma improperly elected delegates, she would also have won.

The shock election of captured Free State Premier Ace Magashule to the powerful position of secretary-general indicates, too, the range of subterfuge­s in play. He survived by nine votes a recount, after three dozen “mislaid” votes turned up. This result may yet be challenged legally but, for the interim, it means that the “top six” politburo is split three-three.

This cleavage extends down the middle of the entire new ANC national executive committee (NEC). Some number crunchers aver that, at best, Ramaphosa holds a majority in the NEC by an edge of only two or three people.

This all stacks up to stark evidence that the Capture forces failed by a hairsbread­th in their attempt to hijack the party. It means, also, that despite being thwarted, they will be emboldened in their determinat­ion to continue swaying the ANC’s agenda to suit their agenda of continued looting of state resources, especially if President Jacob Zuma manages to hang in for his full term, which ends in 2019.

What is even more stunning is if one considers how this result flies in the face of what ordinary South African voters want. The polls show unambiguou­sly that Ramaphosa is preferred over Dlamini Zuma, by a wide margin, by almost every demographi­c of the voting public: race, ethnicity, language, gender and rural/urban.

It’s a devilishly difficult situation for Ramaphosa and the Old ANC. But it does not equate, as some infer, to a state of impasse.

There is the enormous powers of patronage and retributio­n that the president of the country has simply by being the incumbent. Zuma is the textbook example of this. Through the cunning appointmen­t of his lackeys to key positions, and the insidious marginalis­ation of his opponents, he soon negated the numerical majority of Old

ANC leaders and officials who had survived the ousting of former president Thabo Mbeki.

Ramaphosa, from the opposite ideologica­l position, will do exactly the same. There is no reason to believe that the savvy negotiator of the 1994 constituti­onal agreement is any less manipulati­ve than Zuma and the Dlamini Zuma acolytes will readily bend the knee to the new boss. It does, however, mean that Ramaphosa will want Zuma removed from office, so as to negate the president’s influence, as soon as possible. For the ANC to engage with any success in the 2019 general election behind a façade of party unity, Zuma’s malevolent behaviour has to be curbed.

Zuma must either be prevailed upon to resign or, like Mbeki, be recalled – which would be far more difficult and destructiv­e to the party and country. But it is a signal of the pressure that Zuma is going to come under, even before the shambolic elective conference had ended, both NEC factions were warning about the dangers of two centres of power – an ANC president at odds with SA’s president.

It is in the DNA of every political party to hang together, to best retain power. Splinterin­g only happens when one faction is clearly so strong that it can afford to drive out another without facing electoral defeat. Or, when the splinter group believes it can win enough support because it has better read the electoral temperatur­e.

So, there is no imminent ANC split. Despite the loathing between the two factions, internecin­e warfare and compromise is for both, for the moment, far more secure in terms of hanging on to power, than going it alone. But the result of this is unambiguou­sly bad for the country. Ramaphosa will have to at least pretend to compromise, with some seriously dumb policy ideas – like amending the constituti­on to allow land expropriat­ion without compensati­on plus free tertiary education – that the ANC conference this week committed the party to.

The 2019 election is just 15 or so months away. Ramaphosa will have to act fast, especially against corruption, to buff the complexion of a party that has seen its share of the vote slide from 70% in the 2009 national elections to a vulnerable 54% in the 2016 provincial elections.

The Jaundiced Eye column resumes in the second week of

2018. Follow WSM on Twitter @ TheJaundic­edEye

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