The Daily Telegraph

ANC wins South Africa poll despite worst performanc­e

- By Adrian Blomfield and Peta Thornycrof­t in Johannesbu­rg

CYRIL RAMAPHOSA, South Africa’s reformist president, has consolidat­ed his tenuous hold on power after his ruling African National Congress avoided electoral disaster yesterday.

Although the ANC was set to record its worst performanc­e in a national election since the end of white rule in 1994, the decline was less steep than some had predicted, leaving Mr Ramaphosa in a stronger position to fend off party rivals.

With 65 per cent of ballots counted, the ANC led with 56.7 per cent, five points below what the party achieved in 2014 when it was led by Jacob Zuma.

The party removed Mr Zuma as its leader in 2017 after a poor showing in municipal elections the previous year led even his allies to conclude that he was an electoral liability.

Yet Mr Ramaphosa, chosen to replace him by the narrowest of margins, has always been vulnerable to elements of the party suspicious of his pro-business instincts and his promises to end corruption.

Had the ANC’S share of the vote slipped closer to 50 per cent, as some opinion polls suggested, Mr Ramaphosa – who became South Africa’s president last year – risked a potential leadership challenge from an alliance of populists and Zuma-era holdovers who fear prosecutio­n.

With the ANC polling higher than it did in 2016’s local elections, when it lost control of the commercial capital Johannesbu­rg, Mr Ramaphosa can claim that his reformist policies have helped halt the party’s decline.

“People have shown their trust in Cyril,” said Mcebisi Ndletanya of the University of Johannesbu­rg. “The ANC would never have done so well without him. This is a gift the ANC can’t waste.”

The ANC appears to have shed support among black voters to both the pro-market Democratic Alliance (DA) and the far-left Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) led by Julius Malema, a radical populist who advocates the forced seizure of white-owned farms.

However, the DA failed to increase its share of the vote for the first time since 1994 after some white voters deserted it, turning either to the ANC in the hope of bolstering Mr Ramaphosa or to the Freedom Front Plus, a farright Afrikaner party. The DA was projected to win 22 per cent.

The EFF was set to come third, the only significan­t party to increase its share of the vote, securing 10 per cent of the votes tallied thus far.

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