The Scotsman

Divided ANC left even weaker after Zuma hangs on

- By KRISTA MAHR

Minutes after South African President Jacob Zuma narrowly escaped a no-confidence vote this week, he was singing and dancing outside parliament with a throng of supporters from his African National Congress party.

That celebrator­y mood faded fast.

Although Mr Zuma survived the most serious attempt yet on his leadership, allegation­s of corruption and poor governance have significan­tly weakened the ANC, the once potent party of Nelson Mandela, observers said.

The ANC, instrument­al in ending South Africa’s apartheid regime of racial discrimina­tion, has ruled since the country’s first allrace elections in 1994. But itssupport­hasbeenero­ded since Mr Zuma came to power in 2009 as South Africans have vented their frustratio­n at the ballot box over high unemployme­nt and a lack of basic services such as water and electricit­y.

In a striking sign of dissent in the party, more than 25 ANC members supported the opposition’s move this week to vote out Mr Zuma or did not show up to vote. Of the 384 votes cast in an unpreceden­ted secret ballot, 177 were in favour of unseating him and 198 were against, with nine abstention­s.

That public display of rebellion also highlighte­d party members’ bruising battle to succeed Mr Zuma, who will step down as ANC leader in December.

A steady stream of ANC members and anti-apartheid veterans have urged him to step aside before then, as anger grows among voters over scandals that included millions of pounds of public money being spent on his private home.

Mr Zuma will have more damaging moments in the coming months, with courts set to hear a bid by the opposition Economic Freedom Fighters party to impeach him, as well as Mr Zuma’s own appeal to drop nearly 800 charges of alleged corruption, racketeeri­ng and fraud against him.

The developmen­ts have chipped away at the ANC’S decades-old moral authority, while pro- and anti-zuma factions in the party fight for control and prepare for the 2019 national elections.

Susan Booysen, a professor of politics at the University of Witwatersr­and, said: “The ANC works on the assumption it can pull together a credible campaign in the future and that the core of the ANC is still there.”

But that is not a certainty, she said, adding: “The ANC is really, really in a deep crisis.”

Its vote share dropped from nearly 70 per cent in the 2004 national elections to just over 62 per cent in 2014. Then the party had its worst-ever showing in the 2016 local elections.

newsdeskts@scotsman.com

 ??  ?? African National Congress members celebrate in the Cape Town parliament after South African president Jacob Zuma survived a no-confidence vote
African National Congress members celebrate in the Cape Town parliament after South African president Jacob Zuma survived a no-confidence vote

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