Bangkok Post

South Africa opposition leader quits

Effort to appeal to black voters falters

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JOHANNESBU­RG: The effort by South Africa’s biggest opposition party to appeal to black voters is in tatters following the resignatio­n of its first black leader and other top officials, highlighti­ng deep racial divisions that remain in the country a quarter-century after the end of the harsh system of apartheid.

Mmusi Maimane quit the Democratic Alliance on Thursday after stepping down as party leader the day before, leaving many South Africans to predict that black supporters would flee as well.

Mr Maimane and other officials resigned just days after the return of Helen Zille, a divisive figure who once famously tweeted that colonialis­m wasn’t all bad, pointing to industrial developmen­t and educationa­l advances under colonial rule. That 2017 tweet is still hotly criticised today.

Ms Zille’s new role as national chair has been interprete­d by many as the return of the DA to its “rightful owners”, South Africa’s white minority.

“Despite my best efforts, perhaps the DA is not the best vehicle to take forward the fight for one South Africa for all,’’ Mr Maimane said, following the party exit of another prominent black DA figure, Johannesbu­rg mayor Herman Mashaba, earlier this week.

Both leaders were criticised in an internal report for the party’s lackluster performanc­e in the national elections in May. Support for the DA slipped to 20% of votes from 22% in the previous elections. The DA lost support from some of its more conservati­ve white voters, who opted instead for the right-wing Afrikaner party Freedom Front Plus.

The internal report was critical of Mr Maimane’s leadership and blamed him for the drop in white support.

“The relentless focus of winning over black supporters was understand­able, but taking existing voters for granted was always a mistake,’’ it said. “It is striking that over a period of many years, the DA failed to heed a number of warnings that it was alienating sections of the white Afrikaans electorate.’’

Although Ms Zille, a former antiaparth­eid journalist, stepped aside in 2015 to allow Mr Maimane to lead the party, she has been re-asserting herself and is widely viewed to have been behind the criticism of him.

Mr Maimane’s election as the party’s first black leader was significan­t, and the DA gained ground in black communitie­s despite its history. It was formed in 2000 as a result of a merger between the former liberal, white Democratic Party and the New National Party, a re-branded offshoot of the National Party which implemente­d the old segregatio­n policy of apartheid.

Under Mr Maimane the DA won control of key urban areas in 2016 and party members became mayors in Johannesbu­rg, Pretoria and elsewhere.

For the first time an opposition party was posing a growing threat to the African National Congress, the former liberation movement that has ruled South Africa since the end of apartheid and won elections by comfortabl­e margins, confident of the support of black voters.

The DA attracted other black politician­s including Lindiwe Mazibuko, who became the party’s parliament­ary leader, and Patricia de Lille, who became mayor of the DA-governed city of Cape Town. Both later resigned, reportedly after clashing with Ms Zille. Ms de Lille has gone on to found her own party.

Now the DA will find it hard to attract the support of black South Africans and avoid the resignatio­ns of other black leaders, said Ralph Mathekga, a political analyst and researcher at the University of the Western Cape.

Mr Maimane and Mr Mashaba may well decide to start their own political party, Mr Mathekga said. “They are credible leaders and some people feel they have been failed by the DA. There is certainly room for them to explore that space.’’

They might even be courted by the South African opposition party that gained ground in this year’s election, the populist Economic Freedom Fighters, who have won support among people fed up with the country’s high unemployme­nt and dramatic economic inequality.

“You are a good human being, don’t be discourage­d, my big brother,’’ EFF leader Julius Malema tweeted at Mr Maimane on Thursday.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Democratic Alliance leader Mmusi Maimane arrives at an election rally in Kwamashu near Durban, in May.
REUTERS Democratic Alliance leader Mmusi Maimane arrives at an election rally in Kwamashu near Durban, in May.

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