Cape Times

Yengeni: Ramaphosa’s second term bid ‘nonsense’

- SIPHOKAZI VUSO siphokazi.vuso@inl.co.za

ANC National Executive Committee (NEC) member and former uMkhonto we sizwe commander Tony Yengeni has labelled calls for President Cyril Ramaphosa’s second term as “nonsense”.

Speaking to the Cape Times yesterday, Yengeni said he has seen no change in Ramphosa’s five years as the party’s president.

“Any leader who seeks a second term to lead the government or the ANC should do so on the basis of having implemente­d a programme to better the lives of our people. In the last five years that has not happened. In fact things have gotten worse. In my own experience, I have never seen the ANC this divided. Again I ask: a second term for what?” However, sources close to Ramaphosa’s second term campaign said they were not surprised, arguing that Yengeni did not support Ramaphosa in 2017 and they did not “expect anything more from him”. Yengeni has been seen as a backer of NEC member and Tourism Minister Lindiwe Sisulu.

ANC spokespers­on Pule Mabe said Yengeni as a senior member and leader of the party at national level is aware of organisati­onal protocols on communicat­ions including on existing platforms to express such views.

“The ANC doesn’t bar comrades from expressing themselves for as long as they do so within appropriat­e structures and platforms. All of us as a collective elected at the 54th national conference including comrade Tony, are expected to provide leadership to the party, so there is no leader who must exonerate themselves from dischargin­g that responsibi­lity,” he said.

Mabe said the ANC elective conference is only sitting in December and there is “no rush at all”.

“We are not in a hurry, we have a President in Cyril Ramaphosa and now focused on launching our Letsema campaign to consolidat­e our renewal compact with communitie­s,” he said.

Director at School of Public Leadership at Stellenbos­ch University, Professor Zwelinzima Ndevu said: “Tony Yengeni has a well documented history of disagreeme­nt in views with the President in the past few years. The most recent event has been in support of Lindiwe Sisulu’s view on the judiciary. We should also recall that he was the one who called for the vote of no confidence in the President on the leaked audio of one of the NEC meetings. He seems to be very close to the so-called radical economic transforma­tion people.”

Political analyst, Professor Sipho

Seepe said Yengeni has been clear for some time about his “unhappines­s” with how Ramaphosa has led both the ANC and the country.

“Since taking over as president of the ANC, the party is in bad shape. This is a party that has failed to advance its own conference resolution. If anything, Ramaphosa seems determined to destroy what is left of the liberation movement.

“The economy has not grown. Since taking over, the country has been subjected to the unending bouts of load shedding with no reprieve in sight,” Seepe said.

SACP Western Cape secretary Benson Ngqentsu said the current “obsession” with either President Ramaphosa’s second term or who should contest him present a high level of “political degenerati­on within the body politics of our movement”.

“Our preoccupat­ion as we debated and resolved at our 9th Provincial Congress held in March 2022 is to take keen interest in the trajectory our revolution and our country should take. We argued at that congress that our national democratic revolution is facing stagnation and regression. Presently, neither Cyril Ramaphosa’s second term nor Tony Yengeni’s option are a panado for the challenges the ANC and our country faces,” he said.

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