The Sunday Telegraph

South Africa’s ANC loses key cities after worst election defeat

- By Aislinn Laing in Johannesbu­rg

SOUTH AFRICA’S ruling party, the African National Congress, has suffered its worst ever electoral defeat, losing control over Pretoria, the country’s administra­tive capital, in watershed local elections.

With all of the votes counted, the Independen­t Electoral Commission con- firmed, three days after the poll, that the opposition Democratic Alliance (DA) had won 43 per cent of the vote to the ANC’s 41 per cent.

The DA has run Cape Town, the legislativ­e capital, since 2006, and also won the industrial city of Port Eliza- beth at this election. Its leader said it would now seek to form a majority coalition in Tshwane, the municipali­ty covering Pretoria, with the Economic Freedom Fighters, the radical party of expelled ANC youth leader Julius Malema, which won 11 per cent.

It is also likely to try to form a government in the coalition with the EFF in Johannesbu­rg, the main business centre. With the final results still outstandin­g, the ANC was ahead of the DA with 44 per cent to 38, but both the EFF and the DA have said they would not help the ANC reach a majority.

Mmusi Maimane, the Soweto-born former preacher who leads the DA, said this year’s local election would be “seen as a tipping point; the moment the ANC lost its foothold as a dominant party”.

“Now begins the hard work of governing,” he said. In a warning shot to the EFF, which has previously called for mine and bank nationalis­ation and Zimbabwe-style land seizures, he said the DA would not “seek power for power’s sake”.

“We can’t go to bed without worrying that so many South Africans are unemployed, so many face the worst kind of poverty you can find, so many don’t have services,” he said. “We can’t form government­s that will undermine that objective of advancing the cause of freedom in South Africa.”

Nelson Mandela’s ANC swept to power amid jubilation in the first national election for all South Africans in 1994. But current president Jacob Zuma, is under intense pressure from within the ANC to step down after a series of corruption scandals saw the party’s dominance eroded and left Mr Zuma’s hometown, Nkandla, in the hands of its Zulu rival, the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP). “Jacob Zuma will go home to an IFP-run ward, go to parliament in a DA-run city and to work in a DA-run capital city,” the DA’s Phumzile van Damme said.

 ??  ?? Mmusi Maimane, the leader of the DA, said the ANC had ‘lost its foothold as the dominant party’
Mmusi Maimane, the leader of the DA, said the ANC had ‘lost its foothold as the dominant party’

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