The Hindu (Delhi)

A party in decline

Nelson Mandela’s party, which has been in power in South Africa for three decades after the transition from Apartheid, faces its biggest electoral test amid rampant poverty, widening inequality and intra-party factionali­sm

- Srinivasan Ramani African National Congress

Even as elections in India are drawing to a close, the citizens of yet another BRICS country and emerging economy are going to the polls on May 29. The largest country in GDP (nominal) terms in Africa, South Africa has been ruled for three decades by the party that was most associated with the anti-Apartheid struggle — the African National Congress (ANC).

Identified with leaders such as Nobel prize winning Nelson Mandela, who went on to become the first President of racially-integrated South Africa, the ANC has maintained its dominance as the party of governance in the country, so much so that political observers have termed the ANC’s rule in South Africa one of a dominant party presiding over a “party-state”.

The ANC today is helmed by President Cyril Ramaphosa, a businessma­n with a long associatio­n with the party, who served as chairperso­n of the Constituti­onal Assembly after the first democratic elections in South Africa following the end of Apartheid in 1994. Mr. Ramaphosa emerged as ANC president after a strongly contested leadership race against Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, who was supported by then president and widely derided to be a corrupt leader, Jacob Zuma. After the election, Mr. Zuma resigned following pressure from the party and Mr. Ramaphosa was elected unopposed as the President of South Africa by the National Assembly in February 2018.

Mr. Ramaphosa was seen by many as someone who could bring in change after Mr. Zuma’s controvers­ial years. But his government, elected in May 2019 after winning 57.5% of the votes in the general election, had to tackle many economic challenges — the outcome of the COVID-19 pandemic, the inherited weaknesses in the economy and the many failures of state-owned enterprise­s.

As a party leader, he also had to confront a leadership that included heavyweigh­ts who were associated with Mr. Zuma. In July 2021, when Mr. Zuma refused to comply with a summons order from a Constituti­onal Court that was set up to inquire into allegation­s of “state capture” and “fraud” in the public sector during his tenure, he was sentenced to 15 months of imprisonme­nt. Mr. Zuma went on to announce that he would be voting for the newly formed party, the uMkhonto we Sizwe (named after the armed organisati­on a›liated to the ANC during the anti-Apartheid struggle) in the 2024 elections despite being a lifelong member of the ANC.

Earlier, factional troubles in the

ANC had also resulted in the formation of new parties such as the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) by former

ANC Youth League leaders. The EFF, which won 10.8% of the vote in the 2019 elections, retains an ideologica­l view that is closer to some of the radical sections of the ANC and believes in measures such as nationalis­ation of mines, banks and other industries and appeals to unemployed youth who are not seen as ANC supporters.

While the ANC is expected to retain its presence as the single largest party in the coming elections, its performanc­e could be dented by concerns among South Africans about persisting poverty and rising inequality. The World Bank said in 2020 that 37.9% of the population is living at internatio­nal poverty levels of $3.2 per person a day with 25% (13.8 million people) experienci­ng food poverty. The country’s Gini coe›cient was 0.63 in its last measured value in 2014, showing widespread inequality.

These concerns have already dampened voting enthusiasm among the ANC’s core Black voters. Voter turnout in South Africa among eligible voters fell from 85.53% in 1994 to 47.28% in 2019 after a steady decline election after election, according to the Internatio­nal Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (IDEA). Dissatisfa­ction with the ANC’s performanc­e has also led to disillusio­nment with democratic institutio­ns itself with Afrobarome­ter in 2021 recording that only 40% of South Africans preferred democracy over non-democratic options.

PROFILES

The chief rival to the ANC in the South African party system remains the centrist Democratic Alliance, which has emphasised its opposition to what it calls the “state capture” of the ANC and its cadres and the reduction of the South African democratic system into a dominant one-party state. But it is largely seen as a party that represents the interests of the white minority and has been unable to expand its reach. Controvers­ial views espoused by the DA’s leaders on the legacy of colonialis­m have only increased the suspicion among Black voters.

The core support base of the ANC, despite misgivings among its voters, remain those who have experience­d racism during the Apartheid era and were aware of the ANC’s efforts during the struggle and many who still perceive the ANC as the only party capable of addressing the problems faced by the Black community in particular.

Formed in 1912 as the South African Native National Congress to press for rights of Black South Africans, it was renamed to its current appellatio­n in 1923 and mostly functioned as an organisati­on devoted to getting legislatio­n passed in favour of the community. But by the 1940s, with the inffiux of younger left-wing activists committed to mass mobilisati­on movements, trade union activity and resistance tactics, the ANC, under the leadership of Alfred Xuma, had become a major movement. In the 1950s, the ANC intensified its mass campaigns, which included strikes, boycotts and civil disobedien­ce movements, and by 1955, it was a key signatory to the “Freedom Charter” that became vital to the anti-Apartheid struggle.

Other signatorie­s included parties and organisati­ons such as the South

African Communist Party (SACP), the South African Indian Congress and trade unions. The SACP, along with the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU), remains aligned with the ANC as part of the Tripartite Alliance, which was forged in 1990 after the release of Nelson Mandela from prison.

Organisati­ons aligned with the ANC such as the uMkhonto we Sizwe (MK or Spear of the Nation) launched an armed struggle against Apartheid in the 1960s after the ANC itself was banned and its leadership went undergroun­d. Leaders like Mandela were arrested and remained in jail for nearly three decades. Negotiatio­ns by the Apartheid regime with the ANC to end the system and transit into multi-racial democracy began in the 1980s. After the release of Mandela and the lifting of the ban on the ANC in the early 1990s, an interim

Constituti­on was ratified. The ANC clinched a thumping victory in the

1994 elections and Mandela became President.

Mandela’s government was widely popular and allowed for a peaceful transition of power. But with the party retaining a structure which is largely hierarchic­al that reverted to a culture of patronage on assuming power, degenerati­on set in over the years. Ineffective governance, economic woes and allegation­s of chronic corruption led to a sharp decline in the ANC’s popularity, especially during the Zuma regime, with the party winning 57.5% of the vote in the 2019 elections.

With Mr. Ramaphosa being seen as unable to stem the decline and relying only on incrementa­l steps to bring change in the party, the ANC may have to rely upon other parties in South Africa’s proportion­al representa­tion system to continue to stay in power.

By the 1940s, with the influx of younger left-wing activists committed to mass mobilisati­on movements, the ANC, under the leadership of Alfred Xuma, had emerged as a major movement

In the 1950s, the ANC intensifie­d its mass campaigns, which included civil disobedien­ce movements, and by 1955, it was a key signatory to the “Freedom Charter” that became vital to the anti-Apartheid struggle

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: R. RAJESH ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: R. RAJESH

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