Business Day

Is SA ready for DA’s ‘modern’ alternativ­e?

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Race has dominated SA in the modern era, putting the National Party in power in 1948 and giving the ANC a decisive majority in 1994. Between apartheid and ANC-style nonraciali­sm a third way has offered itself to voters, but its inability to challenge the racial monoliths of our politics has routinely condemned it to the margins; a podium finish but never the big prize.

Which is why the DA’s jamboree at the weekend to sceptics suggests a case of let’s do it again, this time with meaning. Whether this attempt is any more successful than previous iterations remains to be seen.

DA leader John Steenhuise­n, flushed with his election victory over political lightweigh­t Mpho Phalatse, set the tone for the party’s assault on the ANC’s near three-decade rule by making two points: that ANC electoral support will implode below 50% in the 2024 elections, and that SA faces grave danger from the prospect of an ANC-EFF coalition.

Luckily for the DA and Steenhuise­n, substantia­l difference­s remain between the ANC and the EFF, but their commonalit­ies are apparent. Events in the Gauteng metros, most recently in Ekurhuleni where the ANC and EFF voted to get a political unknown elevated to the mayoralty, give a taste of the expedience and the total absence of principle at play. Nonraciali­sm and economic good sense, and the country’s future prosperity, could be put at risk.

There so clearly is another way. One had only to look at the scenes of jubilant and enthused delegates at the DA’s jamboree for tangible hints that the DA is far more “nonracial’’ than the ANC, by all measures more demographi­cally representa­tive of race, class, region and language in SA than the ANC. It has become a truly SA party, modern in its outlook and energised by the future rather than the past. Its detractors see this as a cloak to obscure its alleged protection of white and minority interests.

Some of the positions put forward at the conference, for example the removal of race as the determinin­g factor in establishi­ng identity, speak of an attempt to strip race of its historical significan­ce, while striking a blow at its more egregious policy manifestat­ions in the form of BEE, preferenti­al procuremen­t and threatened expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on. Keeping Steenhuise­n on as leader might seem too counterint­uitive by half when the idea is to attract the black vote. But the DA clearly feels its track record, its stated commitment to clean governance and its obvious success in governing the Western Cape, will win over even black voters, tired of ANC mismanagem­ent, corruption and lethargy.

But that is to appeal to the rational instinct of the voter, and not necessaril­y the emotional. In an odd twist, the continued tenure of President Cyril Ramaphosa offers the DA a potential coalition lifeline, for he almost single-handedly holds the line against the tidal wave of economic illiteracy that has overcome the ANC in recent years, driven by the new “young lions” in the national executive.

If the ANC does slip below 50% — which is far from given — good sense would hope under Ramaphosa it would find common ground with the DA, setting aside historic and often quite artificial difference­s. But the ANC could also play the populist card, inadverten­tly parroting the EFF’s message and legitimisi­ng its leader Julius Malema’s brand of destructiv­e politics.

It’s easy to get ahead of oneself, with the great flux in SA politics capturing the headlines but not necessaril­y the true drift of underlying currents. What if the ANC isn’t on its way out anytime soon? Power is one thing, but an important corollary is opposition, and our politics needs it in abundance. By acting as a watchdog, in the courts, in parliament and in a host of different legislatur­es and councils, the DA can and must continue to perform an invaluable task in holding the ANC to account and curbing its more extravagan­t and destructiv­e tendencies. It needs to set an example, raise the bar.

The clockwork-like running of the DA’s gathering contrasted with the ANC’s shambolic December conference. The party will be hoping voters draw an obvious conclusion, and that the mind will trump the heart, perhaps for the first time in our politics. Meanwhile, the DA itself needs to communicat­e clear and viable policy alternativ­es and behave like a party ready and able to be part of a coalition government.

SCENES OF JUBILANT DELEGATES AT THE DA’S JAMBOREE SHOW THE PARTY IS MORE ‘NONRACIAL’ THAN THE ANC

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