Sowetan

SQUABBLING HAS LEFT THE PARTY DIVIDED AHEAD OF THE 2019 POLLS

- Consultati­ve conference. a Comment on Twitter @Nompumelel­oRunj

transfer of power from the current crop of leaders to those who will lead the party into the 2019 national polls and the future.

The ANCYL are avid defenders of Zuma. This call should not be seen as a call for his removal. If anything, the league wants to fasttrack Zuma’s succession plan – which means the instalment of a top six that is sympatheti­c to the causes and interests of the lame-duck president would be malleable to his and his cronies’ whims after he leaves office.

An early conference would not strengthen the anti-graft, ethical and moral grouping within the ruling party. This grouping is disparate and lacks coherence. It is only identifiab­le as individual­s and leaders who deplore the politics of patronage and corruption that have crippled the effectiven­ess of the party and weakened the government. Such a conference would lay bare their lack of strategy and planning. It would reveal that they do not have an alternativ­e proposal for leadership and the requisite groundswel­l of support to replace the status quo with a new era. Hence proposal number three:

The ANC in Gauteng has rejected outright the call for an elective conference and have joined the chorus for a consultati­ve conference together with the SACP.

A consultati­ve conference would provide the anti-Zuma grouping with the platform to lobby for a change of guard and to garner the support of the broad constituen­cy in the ANC as an organisati­on.

It would allow them to build a coherent alternativ­e vision of leadership and governance rather than that presented by the Zuma epoch and ready them to meet the 2017 succession showdown with formidable resolve.

But while the various voices and interests within the ANC dither, making public pronouncem­ents in an attempt to sway and embolden the hitherto Zuma loyalists in the NEC, the reality is that whatever proposal wins, it is unlikely to be sufficient to arrest the runaway train that is heading for a cliff.

Between now and the 2019 elections, the ANC should build more credibilit­y and legitimacy in the eyes of the public.

The culture of underminin­g the rule of law and acting irrational­ly has been so entrenched. The government just lost another court case this week at the Constituti­onal Court, where Robert McBride succeeded in his bid against Police Minister Nathi Nhleko.

Zuma has already placed his government on a collision course. Members of his cabinet are publicly opposing each other, ministers such as Mosebenzi Zwane are using their positions to do the bidding of outsiders, and he has emboldened his allies to use organs of state and parastatal­s to further their narrow interests.

The period between the 2017 elective conference and the 2019 general election will not be sufficient for the ANC to regain the trust of the masses – even if the broom sweeps the Zumarites out.

“A conference would expose lack of strategy

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