Mail & Guardian

EFF speaks the language of fantasy

The Economic Freedom Fighters’ local poll manifesto promises that all potholes will be fixed within 48 hours

- Chris Mann

There’s none so rhetorical as the pseudo-radical. The EFF’s election manifesto for the local government elections in August shows why that is the case. The manifesto states that its focus is to create jobs and provide quality services for all, and sets out 24 pages of commitment­s. These range from increasing the allocation of state revenue to municipali­ties to broadening the range of municipal services defined in the Municipal Systems Act.

The EFF differenti­ates itself from the present ruling party by committing itself to building “PEOPLE’S municipali­ties whose primary inspiratio­n and focus is the PEOPLE”.

Municipal councillor­s will reside in the ward that elected them and would report back monthly to their constituen­ts.

An EFF municipali­ty would expropriat­e land for the use of residents on the basis of “use it or lose it”, provide bulk services and stands to people for free, insource workers, ensure that schools and clinics have electricit­y and water, and that no councillor receives financial or sexual favours for allocating houses.

Other ideas that would attract voters include wiring bus and taxi ranks with wi-fi, building an early childhood education centre in each ward, giving free land to religious organisati­ons, employing community safety workers, installing security CCTV in streets, and opening six-days-a-week service-delivery complaint centres.

EFF councillor­s would make their contact details available to all constituen­ts, respond to requests from the community 24 hours a day, act as a father or mother figure to orphans in the ward, ensure no one in the ward goes hungry and that the poor receive a proper burial.

An EFF municipali­ty would ensure that a minimum of 50% of basic goods, services and products consumed in the municipali­ty is manufactur­ed, processed or assembled within the municipali­ty.

It would also establish municipali­ty-owned companies: a human settlement agency for housing, a roads agency, an abattoir and meat processing entity, a fresh produce market, a printing company for municipali­ty stationery and a theatre and recording studio for artists.

Also, community trusts will own 40% of all malls, mines and industries in the municipal area, returning 40% of all profit to the municipali­ty.

It would also establish a driving school for matriculan­ts, parks and sports facilities and host arts and music festivals.

An EFF municipali­ty would not accept cadre deployment­s, and would do away with consultant­s.

Furthermor­e, tenders would be issued to local citizens who would be employed directly by the municipali­ty with a “decent living wage and pension”.

An EFF municipali­ty’s hugely increased range of services would be financed from several sources. Income would include, as at present, local rates and conditiona­l grants from central government. In the future, revenue collected from municipal-owned entities would be added.

The EFF would in addition raise funds from progressiv­e internatio­nal partners and privatesec­tor corporate social-investment grants. No attempt is made to estimate the increase of expenditur­e by an EFF municipali­ty: Would it quadruple, or more? Nor is there an indication of which central government department­s would be prepared to forfeit a portion of their current treasury allocation to fund the increase.

The crucial and complex issue of income and expenditur­e occupies a scant 10 lines.

A lack of financial and economic expertise has bedevilled the ruling party’s policies and leadership for years. The same type of numerical illiteracy is visible in the EFF’s manifesto, which shows nowhere any acquaintan­ce with the eminently clear Municipal Finance Management Act of 2003.

South Africa has more t han 250 municipali­ties, over 90% of which, according to auditor general Kimi Makwetu, are in financial difficulti­es.

Summaries of auditor general reports show that most municipali­ties are culpable of unauthoris­ed, fruitless and wasteful expenditur­e. It’s not surprising that, over the past three years, there have been on average 1 200 service delivery protests a year, many of which turn violent, according to the minister of police’s annual report.

In response, Pravin Gordhan, during his brief tenure as minister of cooperativ­e governance and traditiona­l affairs, initiated a national “back-to- basics” campaign. The aims are similar to the EFF’s: putting people first, improving service delivery, ensuring good governance and sound financial management, and building strong institutio­ns.

This initiative does not tackle other local government issues, also not mentioned in the EFF manifesto:

rural to urban areas; by ruling-party cadre deployment­s; engineerin­g and managerial skills;

executive mayor, who is answerable to fickle provincial party leadership­s; and

- bling feuds among underskill­ed managers jockeying to retain credibilit­y.

A frequent complaint on radio phone-in programmes puts the issue succinctly: “Abaphathi bethu abawaz’ umsebenzi wabo [the people who govern us don’t know their work].”

The manifesto promises a flush toilet to all and bulk sewerage and sanitation to make this happen. How would EFF councillor­s make this happen, given the Water Affairs and Forestry Report of 2010, which stated that most of South Africa’s 852 waste-water treatment works were in a state of disrepair and only 3.8% would meet internatio­nal “blue drop” standards?

The sewage works run by Makana Municipali­ty (Grahamstow­n) provide a case in point. As in numerous other small municipali­ties, probably a third of the town’s sewage now runs untreated into the river system and water table.

Afuture EFF councillor, tasked to repair and upgrade the facility, would be in a difficult position. The already hardpresse­d director of infrastruc­ture would not have the time or skills to design a sewage plant, nor can the short-skilled director and staff of the finance department be expected to prepare the budget of a multimilli­onrand civil engineerin­g project.

The EFF councillor may not employ consultant­s. They would be especially reluctant to do so if these were deemed colonialis­ts and settlers. These societal generalisa­tions are othered and demonised in the EFF’s founding manifesto with a fervour reminiscen­t of Stalin, Mao and Pol Pot’s vindictive and ultimately murderous attitude towards the bourgeoisi­e.

If a special dispensati­on were to be signed by the area commander of the EFF, or the self-styled commanderi­n-chief himself, the municipal councillor would then find it difficult to comply with the requiremen­t that 50% of municipal expenditur­e must be spent on goods and services produced locally.

The incumbent EFF councillor could provide builders’ sand but what about the cement?

Would a cement manufactur­ing company have to be establishe­d by the municipali­ty? Would the planks for the scaffoldin­g have to come from an (as yet) unplanted forest, sawn in a sawmill not yet built?

The unit costs of production of small runs of pockets of cement and planks would be much more expen- sive than those produced in large quantities elsewhere in South Africa or abroad.

Who would pay for the capital setup cost of these North Korean-like ideologica­l entities, their recurrent annual loss and the irrational price of their products? State pension funds administer­ed by the Public Investment Corporatio­n? The ratepayers of a small impoverish­ed town?

Pompous political rhetoric hastens monetary inflation and currency devaluatio­n. The EFF’s national commitment to expropriat­e mines, banks and land without compensati­on will accelerate asset shrinkage and flight, leaving less and less money for local municipali­ties.

The short-term, Zanu-PF solution, would be to issue and more papermoney. The long-term result will be a national black market in US dollars, and a massive loan from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund or a Chinese bank, in exchange for handing control of South Africa’s macroecono­mic policy to Washington or Beijng.

Rhetoric and the l anguage of manipulati­on used by unscrupulo­us marketing executives, religious extremists and politician­s alike suffuses contempora­ry culture.

Is the language of the EFF’s manifesto, with its beguiling idealism and Fanonist trappings, realistic? Or is it the utopian rhetoric of a personalit­y cult doomed to make bad things worse? Or something else?

As elections approach, South African citizens need to examine such use of language with greater diligence than ever.

 ?? Photo: Delwyn Verasamy ?? Pseudo-radical: Julius Malema addresses EFF supporters in Soweto in April at the launch of the party’s election manifesto.
Photo: Delwyn Verasamy Pseudo-radical: Julius Malema addresses EFF supporters in Soweto in April at the launch of the party’s election manifesto.

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