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South Africa is a state in drift

- ROGER SOUTHALL Southall is a professor of sociology at the University of the Witwatersr­and. | Conversati­on

THE dismal fate of Zimbabwe under the stewardshi­p of the Zanu-PF government has long stood out as a warning to South Africa’s governing party, the ANC. Yet rarely has South Africa been in more danger of launching into a trajectory of Zimbabwe-like decline than now.

The South African media is thoroughly consumed with the political crisis within the ANC: the rampant factionali­sm, the massive corruption, the “capture” of the state by the practice of “cadre deployment”, and the resulting decline in the party’s poll ratings.

There are genuine fears (or hopes) that the party will lose its electoral majority at the next general election in 2024.

From this follows the most fundamenta­l question of all: If the ANC lost its majority at the next election, as the Zanu-PF did in the parliament­ary and presidenti­al elections of 2008, would it democratic­ally concede power?

Or, alternativ­ely, would it thwart the popular will by systematic­ally underminin­g any post-election coalition government, as Zanu-PF did when it entered a coalition with the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) in 2009? It refused to give up presidenti­al power and clung on to all the key levers of state power. It subsequent­ly rigged the 2013 general election.

What prompts such thinking is the apparent dilemma confronted by President Cyril Ramaphosa, who is also the

ANC president. He positioned himself as the candidate who would reform the ANC. He also pledged to clean up the mess of corruption left by the Zuma presidency and set South Africa back on the path of growth.

But for all the talk, Ramaphosa has made little progress. He appears to be paralysed by an inability to resolve the battle between factions within the ANC. He apparently lacks the authority to control his Cabinet. And the will to do so.

So long as this continues, the country remains in a state of drift. The level of unemployme­nt is shocking, the extent of poverty among the black population is appalling, and the prospects for meaningful and appropriat­e economic growth are minimal.

No wonder so many fear that South Africa has embarked upon a Zimbabwean-style decline into a basket-case economy run by a liberation movement autocracy.

Three key features of liberation movements

Highlighti­ng three key features of liberation movement rule – such as that by the Zanu-PF and the ANC – helps us to understand the present crisis in South Africa.

First, liberation movements are characteri­sed by simultaneo­us democratic and authoritar­ian impulses. Their claim to having liberated their countries from colonial oppression has much merit. This is true if they are reluctant to share this with other forces that participat­ed in the Struggle for freedom.

Furthermor­e, their present claim to be representa­tive of “the people” ensures that they cannot ignore the needs of their supporters. On the other hand, they have a long history of authoritar­ianism. Although they tolerated internal dissent during the freedom Struggle, they also quelled it, at times with brutal violence.

After the arrival of democracy, they have systematic­ally suppressed rivals or allies with a legitimate claim to having contribute­d to the Struggle.

Zapu, led by Zimbabwean liberation Struggle hero Joshua Nkomo, was bruised and beaten until it agreed to merge itself into Zanu-PF in 1987.

The United Democratic Front, the effective internal wing of the ANC during the latter years of apartheid, dissolved itself following heavy pressure to do so by the ANC in 1991.

Both the Zanu-PF and the ANC tolerate opposition parties. But they systematic­ally seek to delegitimi­se them by characteri­sing them as counter-revolution­ary or agents of foreign powers.

Second, the liberation movements have become the vehicles for rapid class-formation. Although they won political power, they inherited only limited economic power, as the commanding heights of their economies remain in private hands.

Nonetheles­s, by gaining control over the state, Zanu-PF and the ANC secured control over the state-owned enterprise­s. In South Africa, these accounted for around 15% of GDP in the early 1990s.

Initially, their principal focus was on removing old-guard public servants, whose loyalty to a democratic government could not be assumed, and replacing them with party loyalists who could be trusted.

This resulted in the merging of party and state, weakening the independen­ce of bodies of accountabi­lity establishe­d under their respective constituti­ons.

And, justified on the basis of pursuing the revolution, efforts were made in both countries to “capture” the commanding heights of the economy. This was achieved fully in Zimbabwe, but only partially in South Africa.

The process was easily perverted into lining the pockets of an increasing­ly predatory party-state bourgeoisi­e. This, as Zanu-PF’s and the ANC’s control of the public service, including the parastatal­s, enabled them to allocate high paid jobs, tenders and procuremen­t contracts to cronies.

Third, there is a constant tension between liberation movements’ commitment to the liberal constituti­onalism by which they acceded to power and their aspiration­s to monopoly domination of society.

The liberation movements regard themselves as the historic embodiment­s of the aspiration­s of the people. Their logic is that those who are not for them are against them. Constituti­onal restraints on the exercise of power by the state are weakened or ignored.

Above all, other political parties or organs of civil society which make claims to represent the popular will are dismissed as counter-revolution­ary. The popular will cannot be shared.

These (and other) liberation movement dynamics lead inexorably to democratic and economic decline. If liberation movements are the historic embodiment­s of freedom, then restraints on their power must constitute unfreedom. Similarly, extension of liberation movement control over the economy must, by definition, constitute the furtheranc­e of the revolution.

Yet such thinking allows little scope for private participat­ion in the economy – unless it is closely aligned with the interests of the governing party. It allows even less for popular participat­ion in the political arena – unless it takes place under the umbrella of those who rule.

Leaving the political stage

These dynamics explain why Ramaphosa’s reform agenda has fallen foul of a political paralysis gripping the ANC and the wider arena of politics in South Africa. The ANC retains its determinat­ion to rule yet lacks the capacity to do so effectivel­y. The only way out of the dilemma is its defeat in an election.

However, as the 2008 Zimbabwean example has shown, defeat of a liberation movement in an election does not guarantee its removal from power, so long as it retains the support of the military, police and security services.

Perhaps South Africa could prove different. The military has been run down, and the police and the security services are themselves heavily factionali­sed.

However, this assumes that there is an opposition party or coalition capable of displacing the ANC electorall­y. And that this would be backed up by a level of popular and civil society support which would be ready and willing to combat any attempt to steal an election.

The liberation movements have fulfilled their historic task. Compelling them to leave the political stage is a daunting but necessary agenda.

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