Mail & Guardian

The Ace escape plan

Magashule to mobilise support from ANC branches in defiant attempt to get step-aside order overturned

- Lizeka Tandwa

ANC secretary general (SG) Ace Magashule has hedged all his bets on the party’s branches advocating for a special conference, which he hopes will exempt him from the step-aside resolution.

Magashule is taking a page out of the playbook of his ally, former president Jacob Zuma, by hopping from region to region and from one branch to the next in the hope of gaining enough support to force the ANC’S leadership to back off.

When Zuma was removed as ANC deputy president, he was reinstated in a national general council (NGC) meeting, humiliatin­g former president Thabo Mbeki and paving the way for his own presidency.

Mbeki subsequent­ly lost his bid to be re-elected for a third term in Polokwane in 2007.

Sources in the ANC say Magashule is planning to tour some of the regions, including the Free State, Limpopo and Kwazulu-natal, to mobilise support. “He wants to mobilise support from branches, who will, in turn, put pressure on national office bearers to reverse their decision. It’s a play from Zuma’s book,” one national executive committee (NEC) member said.

If he gains enough traction in provinces that have the biggest numbers, it might work, the source said. Limpopo and Kwazulu-natal are two of the biggest provinces in terms of ANC membership.

According to the latest figures, Limpopo has 234 663 members, taking up the second spot, which was held by Mpumalanga in the lead-up to the ANC’S watershed 2017 Nasrec conference. The Eastern Cape, the third-biggest province, has 212205 members and Mpumalanga has 181 761.

The Mail & Guardian understand­s that Magashule’s allies are expecting to have enough numbers to swing the step-aside decision in

their favour. “If this strategy fails, ANC branches will call for a special conference where they can appeal the decision,” a source high up in the radical economic transforma­tion (RET) faction said.

EWN reported that Magashule had told provincial secretarie­s during a meeting that he would not be suspended. One ANC secretary corroborat­ed this, saying that Magashule told provincial secretarie­s during the NEC meeting last weekend that he was prepared to continue running ANC headquarte­rs at Luthuli House in Johannesbu­rg, adding that he would not be suspended or taken to a disciplina­ry process.

The ANC’S secretaria­t held a meeting on Monday in an attempt to contain growing frustratio­n during the weekend’s NEC. ‘

“He said he would not leave. He said he has enough support from branches to turn this around and that no one had a right to remove him except for ANC branches,” a provincial leader said. “It was [deputy secretary general] Jessie [Duarte] who tried to reason with him. She tried to calm the situation. No one supported him. He knows that if he

attempts to do this, it has the potential of destroying the ANC.”

Another NEC member, one of President Cyril Ramaphosa’s lieutenant­s, said Magashule might also use his “most tried and tested strategy” for those who support him in the NEC to resign, which would force the party to a special conference.

“In 2005-6 and 2011, the REC [regional executive committee] of Thabo Mofutsanya­na [in the Free State] had to be disbanded because a group supporting Ace had resigned. They were following Ace’s instructio­ns to resign because he could not get things his way,” the source said.

“All provinces should know that this man uses tactics that he tested in the Free State. Many people with good struggle credential­s should

refuse to be victims of this preschool politics, lest they find their legacies destroyed,” the NEC member added.

Branches in the Free State, where the province’s former premier enjoys most of his support, have already penned letters to the top officials relaying their disagreeme­nt with the step-aside decision as it pertains to the secretary general.

In a letter written by regions in the Free State, they say that ANC branches of the ANC “want to state it categorica­lly … that we disagree with the intent by the ANC NEC to remove the SG by any means necessary. We call on the NEC to take branches of the ANC seriously and value the input we make towards building a strong ANC.”

In a separate statement, the Thabo Mofutsanya­na region said its regional task team does not support any attempt to “destabilis­e the organisati­on, particular­ly Magashule’s office”, adding that it called on the NEC to work towards building unity.

However, a provincial chair, who spoke to the M&G, said that although Magashule might gain the sympathy of some regions and branches, should he be forced to vacate his office, he would be left vulnerable in the lead-up to the NGC. This council is the ANC’S mid-term policy review conference, with powers to reverse NEC decisions.

“If you look at provinces, he doesn’t have the support of those secretarie­s. Eastern Cape, Kwazulu-natal, North West, Limpopo and Gauteng secretarie­s are the ones he needs to reverse the decision in the NGC.

“It’s the secretarie­s that collate the numbers in terms of conference­s and if he loses his power as SG, he loses influence with those secretarie­s,” the provincial leader said. “It’s the perfect time for Ramaphosa to kick him out. If he stayed longer, and he was in charge of the branch audits ahead of the NGC, then it would be a disaster for Ramaphosa and his people.”

Magashule and several other ANC leaders facing criminal charges received a red card on Monday when the NEC resolved that all those facing court charges should step aside from their roles in the party.

The decision came during a fierce meeting, which turned chaotic as Magashule’s loyalists threatened to resign. In his closing address, Ramaphosa said that those who refused to step aside after 30 days would be suspended.

Initially, sources told the M&G, the decision was that members had to step aside within seven days and then “it was extended to 14 days”.

It was at the tail-end of the meeting on Sunday that Magashule refused to sign off on the minutes, saying that no agreement had been reached by members for the step-aside resolution to be effected within the indicated days.

In a leaked email, ANC general manager Febe Potgieter-gqubule, who is in charge of co-ordinating NEC meetings and their decisions, said the draft decisions on the stepaside rule were added to the final NEC decision document without Magashule and Duarte’s okay.

On Monday, the top six officials then decided for secretarie­s and Magashule’s office to be given 30 days to write to affected members informing them to step aside. Magashule said he would need to consult with party elders on the matter. On Wednesday, he said he would consult former treasurer general Mathews Phosa and Zuma. Phosa was one of the architects of the stepaside guideline.

‘It’s the perfect time to kick him out … If he stayed longer, it would be a disaster for Ramaphosa’

 ??  ??
 ?? Photo: Alet Pretorius/gallo Images ?? Fighting to the end: Ace Magashule leaving the Bloemfonte­in magistrate’s court, where he appeared in February on charges relating to the asbestos scandal in the Free State.
Photo: Alet Pretorius/gallo Images Fighting to the end: Ace Magashule leaving the Bloemfonte­in magistrate’s court, where he appeared in February on charges relating to the asbestos scandal in the Free State.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa