Daily Maverick

How to do direct democracy

Party bosses have more power to pick who will get leadership positions in Parliament or elsewhere than any ordinary ANC member. And ANC presidents are chosen by no more than 5,000 people – the delegates at conference­s. Yet this affects all of SA.

- By Pierre De Vos

Political parties in South Africa do not provide for the direct election of their party leaders or of their candidates standing for election to public office at national, provincial or local government level. Instead, political parties generally provide for the indirect election of party leaders and candidates for public office in terms of rules set out in the respective constituti­ons of the political parties.

For example, the ANC constituti­on provides for the election of national party leaders at a national conference, by about 5,000 delegates, 90% of whom are selected at “properly constitute­d branch general meetings” (BGMs).

A similar provision applies to the election of ANC provincial party leaders at a provincial conference. The constituti­on of the DA provides for a slightly more complicate­d procedure for the election of office bearers by delegates at a national conference, with about half of these delegates coming from the ranks of the party’s members of Parliament, provincial legislatur­es and municipal councils, and 45% elected to represent the party’s branches.

Because politics is not only about who decides, but also about who decides who decides, the integrity of such indirect elections will partly depend on the integrity of the process by which branch delegates are selected.

When groups or factions manage to manipulate the system to prevent the selection of delegates from an opposing camp or to increase the number of delegates from their own camp, the integrity of the election is fatally undermined. (Sometimes the rules themselves are designed to ensure that party bosses retain some control over who is selected as delegates – as illustrate­d by the process followed by the DA – but this is a discussion for another day.)

Usually, the courts will not get involved in the internal matters of a political party. Although Section 19 of the Constituti­on states that every citizen is “free to make political choices”, which includes “the right to participat­e in the activities of, or recruit members for, a political party; and to campaign for a political party or cause”, the Constituti­onal Court pointed out in 2012 in Ramakatsa and Others v Magashule and Others that the section does not spell out how members of a political party should exercise the right to participat­e in the activities of their party.

“For good reason this is left to political parties themselves to regulate. These activities are internal matters of each political party. Therefore, these parties are best placed to determine how members would participat­e in internal activities.

“The various constituti­ons of political parties are instrument­s which facilitate and regulate participat­ion by members in the activities of a political party.”

Yet the court further held that the Section 19 right to participat­e in the activities of a political party “confers on every political party the duty to act lawfully and in accordance with its own constituti­on”. Based on this principle, the ANC’s Free State provincial conference has been nullified on three separate occasions, most recently by the SCA last week in the case of Ramakatsa and Others v African National Congress and Another. (The court has also nullified other ANC provincial conference­s, including the 2015 KwaZulu-Natal elective conference.)

In the most recent Ramakatsa case (not to be confused with the 2012 judgment brought by an applicant with the same surname), the SCA held that a rerun of the Free State provincial conference, previously ordered by the High Court, had not complied with the ANC constituti­on and other rules, because no audit was undertaken of all branches to verify their membership, because some BGMs were never held, and because some BGMs were held without inviting all branch members.

It is therefore likely that the voting delegates who eventually attended the provincial conference did not accurately reflect the views of ANC members in the province.

In cases like this, where some of the very basic procedural requiremen­ts for the selection of delegates to an elective conference were not met, it would not be too difficult for a court to intervene and to nullify either the selection of delegates or the outcome of the conference. This is because these kinds of irregulari­ties are not too difficult to prove and are clearly in conflict with the ANC constituti­on and other applicable rules.

But it will be far more difficult for a court to intervene in other forms of manipulati­on aimed at influencin­g the outcome of an elective conference.

For example, back in 2011, the then secretary-general of the ANC, Gwede Mantashe, warned against forms of “gate-keeping”, where regional power brokers prevented some individual­s from joining the party because of suspicions that they supported the “wrong” camp. Before the last elective conference, some members in good standing were also refused entry to BGMs because they were known to support the “wrong” candidate.

But the easiest (lawful) way to manipulate leadership elections in which branch delegates play a pivotal role is by inflating the membership and the number of branches by bulk-buying membership. A donor pays for the membership of several hundred or thousands of branch members, and these new branches are controlled by one faction (also using “gate-keeping” when necessary) to ensure that the delegates sent from those branches support the candidates of one or the other faction contesting for election.

Of course, manipulati­ng the process (in either a lawful or unlawful manner) to increase the number of delegates for your slate of candidates may all come to nought, because of vote-buying.

Whereas delegates are selected on the understand­ing that they support certain positions and candidates, the leadership election is done by secret ballot and delegates may therefore be persuaded to change their votes in exchange for money or other benefits.

Rumours of vote-buying by both camps contesting for positions at the Nasrec conference have been circulatin­g widely, fuelled by the claim first made by Robert McBride that money from South African Police Service (SAPS) contracts at inflated prices went towards buying votes for the Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma camp at the national conference in 2017.

The rumours intensifie­d after it was revealed that the Ramaphosa camp had spent almost R1-billion on its CR17 campaign.

If the outcome of ANC elective conference­s are indeed influenced by vote-buying, or by the manipulati­on of the organisati­on’s membership, or the selection of branch delegates, the outcome of such elections may not reflect the views of the majority of the bona fide card-carrying members of the organisati­on. If this is so, it would mean that not all members of the organisati­on are able to participat­e in an equitable way in the activities of the party, and – arguably – that this infringes on the Section 19 rights of those members who have, in effect, been disenfranc­hised.

But the problem does not only affect disenfranc­hised ANC members.

Because the ANC is currently the governing party and still electorall­y dominant, who the party elects as president has a profound impact on the entire society. On the assumption that a fair electoral process – which produces an outcome reflecting the will of the majority of party members – is likely to lead to the election of a higher-quality president, all South Africans have an interest in improving the method by which the ANC elects its leaders. (I do not think this assumption is valid for all or even most political parties here and elsewhere, but for reasons I do not have space to engage with here, I suspect it may be valid for the current ANC.)

When groups or factions manage to manipulate the system to prevent the selection of delegates ... or to increase the number of delegates from their own camp, the integrity of the election is fatally

undermined

The easiest (lawful) way to manipulate leadership elections in which branch delegates play a pivotal role is by inflating the membership and the number of branches by bulk-buying membership

Despite this, any reform of the process to elect its leaders will have to come from within the ANC, because it remains a voluntary associatio­n that enjoys wide discretion on how to regulate its affairs.

But, if there are such reformers inside the ANC, the first problem they might encounter is that it is not obvious how to fix the problem to ensure that leadership elections more or less reflect the view of the majority of the bona fide members of the party.

The obvious solution would be to institute a direct election by party members, allowing every party member to cast a single ballot for the candidate of their choice – at least for the Top Six positions. (The Labour Party in Britain uses this system for the election of its leader.)

For practical reasons, this system would not be easy to implement in South Africa. Using postal ballots may run into difficulti­es because no one is going to trust the Post Office to actually deliver the ballots. Using an online voting system will exclude ANC members without access to the necessary technology. And using an in-person voting system would be a logistical nightmare.

But even if these practical difficulti­es could be overcome, other questions would remain. The system would not prevent groups from buying bulk membership­s and then finding a way to get these new (but maybe ghost) members to vote. The system would not be focused on branches, so it would also be far easier for new members to join the party without having to attend branch meetings. Such a system would therefore leave the party vulnerable to entryism, allowing other political groups to join the ANC with the specific purpose of influencin­g the leadership election.

For example, the DA or the EFF could quietly get their members to join the ANC to vote in such a direct election, either for a candidate they think will be unpalatabl­e to voters, or for a candidate they believe shares some of their values and political goals.

Another solution would be to introduce effective checks and balances into the existing system to reduce fraud and manipulati­on. But this would require a highly efficient and non-factional enforcemen­t body inside the ANC to oversee the process and enforce the rules, something that seems unachievab­le. More checks may also slow down the process and may make it very difficult to run such an election. Even then, once the delegates arrive at conference, the likelihood of vote-buying would again rear its head.

I believe this is an important issue that speaks to the quality of our democracy, an issue that requires further reflection.

There may be other ways of improving the system to ensure that leadership election outcomes more or less reflect the views of the majority of the members of the party. I would invite others inside and outside the ANC with an interest in this to advance proposals that may be more workable than those I have been able to think of.

 ??  ?? Delegates wait for a speech by Jacob Zuma (above), then SA president, during the 54th national conference of the ANC in Johannesbu­rg in 2017. A Soweto voter (below) casts a ballot in the 2019 general election. Photos: Waldo Swiegers/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Delegates wait for a speech by Jacob Zuma (above), then SA president, during the 54th national conference of the ANC in Johannesbu­rg in 2017. A Soweto voter (below) casts a ballot in the 2019 general election. Photos: Waldo Swiegers/Bloomberg via Getty Images
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