Mail & Guardian

Difficult anniversar­y speech for CR

Load-shedding and unity are set to dominate the president’s address, which comes at a low point for the ANC

- Lunga Mzangwe

The ANC is preparing to celebrate its 112th birthday on Saturday — 8 January — in the face of the greatest threat to its dominance of South African politics since it came to power in 1994. Not only has its electoral support dropped significan­tly in successive elections since achieving its high-water mark in 2004, it also faces competitio­n from yet another splinter movement at the polls later this year, this time in the form of former president Jacob Zuma’s umkhonto wesizwe Party.

And, although President Cyril Ramaphosa is expected to focus on the continuing load-shedding, the poor delivery of basic services, corruption and the high unemployme­nt rate in his statement, analysts say it is not likely to have any real effect on voters in the national and provincial elections later this year.

The statement has historical­ly been used by the ANC to lay out its programme of action for the year ahead. This dates back to its days in exile when the statement was communicat­ed on its Radio Freedom to members and supporters inside South Africa.

In the post-apartheid context, the statement has provided the ANC with a way of taking stock of the past year’s achievemen­ts and failures and to outline its policy priorities for the 12 months ahead.

Political analyst Ntsikelelo Breakfast said the statement would probably focus on domestic issues, such as the poverty, unemployme­nt and inequaliti­es in the country.

These were the major domestic issues that were a danger to democracy.

He said Eskom would also feature prominentl­y in the statement, with the continued load-shedding a priority for Ramaphosa’s administra­tion — and the party — going into the elections.

Breakfast said there was no doubt that Eskom and load-shedding was the elephant in the room which Ramaophosa had to deal with.

“The ANC is using power outages like a light bulb — they are switching it on and off. During the festive season, they were able to put it on hold so, at the heart of the statement, will be the issue of power outages,” he said.

He said that the slow pace of service delivery, in particular in the municipali­ties run by the ANC, would feature in the speech.

“I think the issue of corruption will feature prominentl­y,” he added.

The party is also under pressure from its alliance partners, labour federation Cosatu and the South African Communist Party, to deal with factionali­sm and to get its house in order.

At last year’s 8 January celebratio­ns in the Free State, Cosatu president Zingiswa Losi urged Ramaphosa to deal with factionali­sm in the party and provide a solution to the rolling blackouts if the ANC hoped to win the elections.

“Workers have put the entire movement on notice; workers are saying to the ANC today to dismantle factionali­sm, remove incompeten­t employees and unite the ANC,” Losi said.

These issues are also expected to feature in Ramaphosa’s address.

Losi said that, on the internatio­nal front, the statement would focus on Israel’s genocidal war on the Palestinia­ns.

On Thursday, the Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ) began hearing the genocide case brought by South Africa against Israel.

South Africa instituted proceeding­s at the ICJ last month over alleged genocide in its retaliator­y strikes against Hamas in Gaza since 7 October, which have left at least 23 000 Palestinia­n civilians dead.

“The request that has been initiated by the

ANC to the ICJ, that they must they must examine the genocide that is committed by Israel to the people of Palestine, will feature because its a very important matter.

“They might also want to reflect on other issues of human rights and conflicts that have taken place in the continent,” Breakfast said.

Breakfast said he did not think the 8 January statement would influence the electoral behaviour of the voters because people have probably already made up their minds about who they were going to vote for.

The damage had already been done and it could not be undone. “People must not lie to themselves with a straight face that the ANC is going to win. The ANC is not going to win — the writing is on the wall,” he said.

“There have been many scientific findings which have been unveiled concerning that the ANC will not reach the required threshold of 50%. For people to walk around saying that they will win with an overwhelmi­ng majority is daydreamin­g.”

Political analyst Susan Booysen said the president would have a difficult task showing the progress the ANC has made, what the party

had to offer and what it had been delivering in the past few years.

She said the statement was the unofficial launch of the ANC’S election campaign and she had no doubt it would influence how voters would perceive the six months ahead.

Booysen added that she did not think the ANC had anything new to offer voters.

“Voters look for a party that they believe has a chance of delivering.”

However, she said despite the difficulti­es it faced, the ANC remained the strongest party and the only one that could say it had a chance to come out with a majority, in its own right.

“At the other side of the coin is that it would need to be more persuasive than has been the case so far that the ANC is really renewing and cleaning itself out.

“I believe he [Ramaphosa] will dish up any bit of informatio­n or evidence that he can find that the ANC is actually renewing and cleaning up because that is what was promised five years ago. He cannot get away without doing this,” Booysen said.

“There is nothing really that the ANC is offering this time around.”

 ?? Photo: Phill Magakoe/afp ?? Statement: Experts are divided on whether President Cyril Ramaphosa’s speech at the ANC’S anniversar­y event at the weekend will affect how people vote in this year’s elections.
Photo: Phill Magakoe/afp Statement: Experts are divided on whether President Cyril Ramaphosa’s speech at the ANC’S anniversar­y event at the weekend will affect how people vote in this year’s elections.

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