Business Day

Mashatile more than a long shot for ANC

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

We are now less than a month from the ANC’s elective conference. Three sets of considerat­ions suggest the outcome of the top six leadership election remains remarkably open.

First and most significan­t clue to potential surprises came in ANC treasurer-general Paul Mashatile’s interview with Business Day this week (“Ramaphosa and Mkhize scandals are not good for the ANC, says Mashatile”, November 16).

Mashatile claimed malfeasanc­e allegation­s against the two probable presidency nominees — incumbent Cyril Ramaphosa and former health minister Zweli Mkhize — represent a dire threat to the party in the 2024 national and provincial elections. Allegation­s certainly continue to swirl around Ramaphosa regarding the Phala Phala game farm incident.

While the two-week extension granted to the “independen­t panel” conducting an investigat­ion on parliament’s behalf makes it unlikely that any devastatin­g findings will be made before the conference, anxiety about the longer-term implicatio­ns is playing on activists’ nerves.

The same may be true of the fallout from the Digital Vibes contract scandal. Although criminal charges do not appear imminent, the matter will continue to cast a shadow over Mkhize, and weaken his claims on the leadership of the ANC.

Unofficial slates of the top six candidates from the Ramaphosa camp have not commonly featured Mkhize — or even his nominal factional ally Mashatile. This has encouraged speculatio­n that the two shunned aspirants might work together in an anti-Ramaphosa slate, although it has become impolite to describe such collaborat­ion in those terms.

The implicatio­n of Mashatile’s remarks about the cloud of scandals might be that he, and not Mkhize, should be the senior partner — the appropriat­e presidenti­al nominee — in such a partnershi­p.

The second clue to potential events concerns the widespread belief among ANC activists that the movement will need, sooner rather than later, to enter into a coalition agreement with the EFF.

Younger activists tend to view such a coalition favourably, or even keenly to hope for the reabsorpti­on of the red berets into the mother body. It is widely assumed that Mashatile is amenable to such a deal, and that Ramaphosa and Mkhize are less so — another reason, in their eyes, for the younger man’s elevation to the top job.

Third, one can imagine that Mashatile had a wry smile on his face when, as acting secretary-general, he assembled the catalogue of proposed constituti­onal amendments to be tabled at the movement’s elective conference in December. The list included the exclusion of candidates older than 65 years from competitio­n for leadership positions.

There is no chance of such a proposal being adopted, but it is a marker of intent that should be taken seriously. After all, it suggests that Ramaphosa, who turned 70 this week, should not run for another term. It also indicates that 66-year-old Mkhize is over the hill. Of course, at 61 Mashatile is no spring chicken, but all wise people know youth is relative.

Keen-eyed observers will object that Ramaphosa and Mkhize are both certain to be nominated for the presidency by the provinces and leagues, whereas Mashatile enjoys open support only for the position of deputy president.

But in these uncertain times we should be alert to the possibilit­y that there could be nomination­s from the floor of the conference in December.

According to the electoral rules anyone with the support of 25% of the delegates is added to the ballot.

Because there is now a twostage ballot, with the deputy president elected later than the president, Mkhize could even withdraw from the presidenti­al contest, throwing his weight behind Mashatile. A newly elected president Mashatile could then support Mkhize’s nomination from the floor as his deputy.

The odds are very much against such a deal being successful. But we cannot exclude the possibilit­y that there is a third serious challenger for the ANC presidency: Paul Shipokosa Mashatile.

 ?? ANTHONY BUTLER ??
ANTHONY BUTLER

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