Mail & Guardian

Beneficiar­ies of big salaries say they ‘love’ the ANC

The fawning praises are mostly sung by those who profit from the ANC’S ‘cadre deployment’

- COMMENT Ebrahim Harvey Ebrahim Harvey is a political writer and author of The Great Pretenders: Race and Class under ANC Rule

Since 1994, many ANC leaders have expressed in the media how much they love and admire the ANC. But there were no such outpouring­s of fawning love and admiration by the leaders during the years when the ANC was banned and its leadership imprisoned or driven into exile, with all the many problems, difficulti­es and hardships they experience­d as a result.

No, it occurs after they won state power in 1994.

Overnight many ANC members, and especially its leading figures, became part of the new government formed by the party after it decisively won the 1994 elections. Its members were automatica­lly privileged by being appointed to various leadership positions across the state and public sectors, irrespecti­ve of the skills, qualificat­ions and experience such posts would logically require.

Here lie the roots of the deep, chronic and systemic problems of ANC “cadre deployment”, from which an avalanche of incompeten­ce and corruption has flowed, especially since Jacob Zuma, became president in 2009.

Probably, no one who became president of the ANC best epitomises this fundamenta­l problem as Zuma does: with little formal education he became the president of the ANC and the country.

But one must be careful not to draw the conclusion that it is only formal education, skills and qualificat­ions that determine suitable leadership. No, the policies pursued by the government and other factors also play a part in this equation. That those factors are important to consider there can be no doubt, especially when we look at what has happened in the government since 1994.

But if you dig deeper, you will find the problems of a lack of formal education and the debilitati­ng consequenc­es of widespread illiteracy among the rank and file of the ANC adversely informed the quality of the delegates the branches sent to the national conference­s where the leadership was elected.

In such a situation some of the most inappropri­ate and unsuitable appointmen­ts and deployment­s to a range of important posts in the government were made under the auspices of ANC membership and involvemen­t in the anti-apartheid struggle.

It is in such a situation that many ANC “cadres” got into government, including occupying the most senior positions in it, as MPS, ministers, premiers, mayors, councillor­s, top positions in all state-owned enterprise­s and the most senior position — president of the ANC and therefore of the country.

I am confident that a study of the CVS of ANC members who have filled leadership positions in state and public sectors since 1994 will confirm this analysis and its conclusion­s.

It is from these layers of personnel in government that you will mostly hear the fawning praises of the ANC sung. There is a simple but powerful political logic at play and underlying these sentiments — the high salaries and generous perks the occupation of high office allows the incumbents.

He who pays the piper calls the tune is probably the most relevant aphorism to understand this political psychology, which also goes towards determinin­g the pervasive culture of rent-seeking and patronage in the ANC government and, to some extent, the malpractic­es and corruption that have occurred.

The logic of what this situation will lead to is that it is often the most senior ANC officials in government whose “love” for the party will be most expressed or felt. After all, they have been well looked after by virtue of being members and “cadres” of the ANC in a variety of senior posts. Hence, the late Jackson Mthembu a few years ago called the ANC “our glorious movement”.

That situation must be contrasted with the lot of rankand-file members of the ANC, who are part of the working class in townships and who have not been fortunate to have government jobs. They are daily immersed in growing poverty, joblessnes­s and its related social miseries.

What this situation has done is to create a yawning chasm between ANC officials in the government and party members and supporters in townships. They live in different worlds and right here is causally rooted the unstoppabl­e township protests that have made this country the protest capital of the world.

We are also the most unequal country in the world. These are two sides of the same coin.

From time immemorial people in the same organisati­on, whether it be a political party, a church or any other organisati­on, tended to compare what they had and the conditions they lived under with other members, especially its leaders.

I have read many times of how much certain ANC leaders “love” the ANC and they were always the elite in the party, whose lives were a far cry from that of ANC members in the townships, who are instead often involved in angry revolts and in raging battles with the police for the satisfacti­on of their most basic needs, such as housing, electricit­y, water, sanitation and jobs.

If ever ordinary members were once in “love” with the ANC they increasing­ly fell out of love with the party, especially with its leadership, after 1994. Nowhere more evident was this antipathy than in the local government elections of 2016, when the ANC lost Gauteng and Tshwane to the Economic Freedom Fighters and Democratic Alliance coalition government­s in those regions.

The truth is that ANC leaders don’t “love” the ANC itself but are besotted with what their membership of the party has done to their lives after 1994 as a result of the government or private sector jobs they benefited so much from.

Yet the bulk of ANC members live in conditions of poverty, unemployme­nt and squalor in townships.

For the vast majority, who live in poverty-stricken households, the stunning rags-to-riches stories of the party leadership reflect the vicissitud­es of the struggles we wage.

 ?? Photo Delwyn Verasamy ?? Inequality: Rank-and-file members of the ANC do not live in nice houses in the suburbs. They live in poverty in the townships and are involved in protests because they want housing, electricit­y, water, sanitation and jobs.
Photo Delwyn Verasamy Inequality: Rank-and-file members of the ANC do not live in nice houses in the suburbs. They live in poverty in the townships and are involved in protests because they want housing, electricit­y, water, sanitation and jobs.

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