Financial Mail

MESSAGE TO RAMAPHOSA RET ISN’T DEAD YET

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Even though it was a widely predicted win, Zandile Gumede’s election as chair of the ANC’s eThekwini region was still astonishin­g for what it says about the rank and file members of SA’s governing party, and their appetite for reform.

Gumede, you’ll remember, was charged alongside 20 others on 2,786 counts of fraud and corruption in March last year, relating to a R430m solid waste tender during her tenure as mayor of eThekwini.

It’s impossible to see her victory in the ANC regional conference on Sunday — defeating Thabani Nyawose, seen as close to President Cyril Ramaphosa — as anything less than a profound endorsemen­t of corruption by the party leading SA.

Conversely, it was a thumping repudiatio­n of Ramaphosa’s reform agenda, putting him on terms that the ANC’s radical economic transforma­tion (RET) faction — headlined by Jacob Zuma and Ace Magashule — isn’t as dead and buried as analysts had predicted.

It’s a view underscore­d by the election, a week ago, of Mandla Msibi as the ANC’s provincial treasurer in Mpumalanga, even though he’s facing two murder charges. Msibi was subsequent­ly told to step aside, and complied, but the fact that he (and Gumede) even stood for election, and were chosen, tells you all you need to know about the party’s rotten culture.

This is a political party where looting and murder are no impediment to higher office, but rather, a commendati­on.

It’s a repudiatio­n of governance, the rule of law, and the constituti­on, and vindicatio­n for critics who argue that the party’s moral centre has decomposed, and is unsalvagea­ble.

Ramaphosa was feted last year for implementi­ng the “step aside” rule, which obliged ANC members facing serious charges to step down until that case had been decided. That rule is now under fire. Increasing­ly, Ramaphosa sounds like the teetotal grandfathe­r, warning the teenagers not to open the fourth bottle of whisky, but being roundly ignored.

After her election, Gumede fired the first shot across the bows when she told the SABC that the “step aside” rule is “killing our movement”.

“I think the ANC branches can discuss it in December — they have already started talking about it,” she said.

While Gumede agreed to step aside until her case is heard, it’s evidently not what she, or others in her party, see as ethically reasonable.

Now, in any reasonable world, the ANC would be punished at the voting booth for its self-serving decisions. Voters are sick of corruption, even if the ANC’s wellheeled elite gravitate towards it. Ramaphosa may understand this, but clearly few others do.

In the local elections last year, the

ANC’s support in KwaZulu-Natal dropped to 42% and, as commentato­rs like Ferial Haffajee argue, Gumede’s election may mean that “it’s game over for the ANC in KwaZulu-Natal’s largest city” when elections are held in 2024.

Either way, it’s a direct challenge to Ramaphosa ahead of December’s national elective conference. The coalition of the compromise­d, coalescing under the RET banner, aren’t rolling over. And they don’t care if they take their party, and the country, down with them.

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