Business Day

Desperate ploy behind Alex ‘shutdown’

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The ANC used to have a state-of-the-art campaign machine. It was profession­al, made sensible use of research and advertisin­g, and carefully targeted its appeals.

This week, however, the pressure began to tell. In two key provinces, Western Cape and Gauteng, the ANC has been wracked by tantalisin­g hopes and terrible fears. These provinces represent the future of the country, with their young and growing population­s and their vibrant economic activity.

As usual, the ANC’s campaign head, Fikile Mbalula, has rallied prominent celebritie­s. Actress and model Minnie Dlamini; rapper AKA; seductive lyricist Chomee; hunky actor Ntokozo Dlamini; and celebrity writer and philosophe­r Peter Bruce: all have rallied to the ANC’s cause.

The ANC’s internal polls,

however, suggest the movement is still in danger. It has responded with an uncharacte­ristic throw of the dice: by instigatin­g protests against the DA-led city government­s in Johannesbu­rg, Tshwane and Cape Town.

The “Alex shutdown”, started more than a week ago, has involved an uneven and mostly unimpressi­ve distributi­on of barricades, symbolic violence, and political verbiage.

At the centre of the “shutdown” has been a call for DA mayor Herman Mashaba to come to Alex and atone for his alleged sins. Given that there is obviously a plan to hound him out of the township to “chase him away with his tail between his legs he has so far wisely declined the invitation.

On Tuesday, provincial premier David Makhura attended a meeting in Alex with “community leaders” (ANC Wednesday cronies). He’emerged s programme to of lambaste the mayor. Meanwhile, busloads of activists were laid on to celebrate inauthenti­c community engagement­s with President Cyril Ramaphosa.

The Tshwane shutdown that began earlier this week, and the Khayelitsh­a shutdown that is under way, are likewise based on demands that DA mayors “account to the community” for their misdemeano­urs.

Sentimenta­l political activists will find it almost sweet that ANC leaders still think their party is a popular movement of the masses. Unfortunat­ely for the ANC’s top leaders who must have signed off on the shutdown the whole fiasco has been marked by extraordin­ary incompeten­ce. The ANC’s fingerprin­t on the events has been so obvious that no citizen more sentient than a potato could view these protests as spontaneou­s or organic.

A large number of fake Twitter accounts were created to spread prepared messages about the Alex shutdown. Does the ANC not even have technologi­cally competent people to cover its tracks? Why choose such implausibl­e protest messages? Are “high water bills” really the key political issue in Khayelitsh­a?

The ANC and DA alike have been toying with “xenophobia” in recent weeks. This is the criminal targeting of poor black people from other countries and often from the northern provinces of SA for intimidati­on, extortion and violence. So concerned was the ANC that its popular rebellion would fail in Alex, that it mobilised xenophobia as the central issue in the shutdown. This is beyond pitiful.

The ANC also failed to anticipate voters’ backlash against being treated like imbeciles. Social media attention understand­ably turned to the disappeara­nce of the R1.3bn dedicated to the Alex Renewal Project more than a decade ago.

The ANC hoped to exploit a general confusion with regard to the powers and responsibi­lities of cities, provinces, and national government department­s. But most citizens know mayors do not exercise exclusive control over housing, education, and health programmes.

The shutdown nonsense has drawn attention to the failure of the ANC at national and provincial levels to support city projects in DA-run councils.

Worst of all, the liberation movement has been campaignin­g on the potential change promised by reputable leaders such as Ramaphosa and Makhura. They represent the “good ANC” that is supposedly going to rescue us from the “bad ANC” we have recently experience­d.

But these squeaky clean politician­s have now played leading roles in a poorly scripted campaign drama that has been based on lies, terrorisin­g foreigners, and the exploitati­on of the misconcept­ions of the poor.

This is not a good campaign strategy.

● Butler teaches public policy at the University of Cape Town.

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ANTHONY BUTLER

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