Sunday Times

Party politics are in a mess; change the Electoral Act now

SA voters deserve the right to choose individual­s of integrity outside the power-drunk ANC, the backslidin­g DA and the dangerous EFF

- By KAIZER NYATSUMBA Nyatsumba is a senior business leader based in Johannesbu­rg

● Common sense, it seems, is anything but common.

At a time when our economy — which was struggling at the best of times — has been ravaged by the coronaviru­s pandemic, when Zimbabwe is fast becoming a Venezuela and poverty among the historical­ly disadvanta­ged is reaching frightenin­g proportion­s, one would have thought that the obvious priorities for our political mandarins would have been to nurse our economy back to health and to bridge the growing chasm between the wealthy and the poor.

One would have expected that President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government in Zimbabwe would have had a single-minded determinat­ion to rehabilita­te that country among civilised nations and to turn its economy around with the help of much-needed foreign investment.

Alas, common sense, it turns out, is very much in short supply.

Here at home we have President Cyril Ramaphosa, who would win hands down if any prizes were offered for saying absolutely the right things in his innumerabl­e speeches and public addresses to the nation, and we have a power-drunk governing party which seems content to focus on internal divisions at a time when it should be offering real leadership and putting the country first.

Crises such as public funerals and Covid-19, it seems, are not opportunit­ies to take charge and rise to the challenge of marshallin­g the forces in the same direction and to inspire confidence in a nation that has become scandal-weary; instead, these are opportunit­ies to pillage and ensure that leaders and those close to them make as much money as possible.

The opposition is not much better. At a time when the ANC is at its most vulnerable, the DA chooses to turn its back on the black majority and to return to the fightback days of Tony Leon when its predecesso­r was content to represent only the country’s minorities.

When it became clear in the 2019 elections that those who were in the verkrampte wing of the New National Party, which was swallowed up by Leon’s Democratic Party to form the DA, could not possibly countenanc­e being led by a black man whose ambition was to turn the party into one which might one day appeal more meaningful­ly to the black majority, the DA chose to remain true to Leon’s values. It chose the past, rather than the future, in a vain effort to lure back those white compatriot­s it had lost to the Freedom Front Plus.

The DA’s performanc­e in the 2019 elections, which was convenient­ly — and wrongly — blamed on poor Mmusi Maimane (when it should have been blamed on Helen Zille’s series of offensive tweets, the merciless hounding of Patricia de Lille out of office as Cape Town mayor, and the party’s lukewarm — or nonexisten­t — position on matters of real importance to black compatriot­s) offered that party a great opportunit­y to ditch its conservati­ve past as ideologica­l purists and reposition itself as a social democratic party with the potential of taking on the power-drunk ANC.

Instead, it chose to retreat to the comfort of Leon’s fightback position, which had some modicum of success for the FF Plus in last year’s election as slaan terug (hit back).

Even during Leon’s days, the DA was happy to have black people support or vote for it — as long as they denied their own identities as black people, pretended that apartheid never existed and were happy to be led by their white superiors.

That is why, when the likes of Lindiwe Mazibuko, De Lille and Maimane became too uppity and began to believe that they could actually lead the party of white privilege, they had to be cut ruthlessly down to size.

Maimane’s biggest mistake, after the 2019 elections, was his choice of people to investigat­e why the DA had performed poorly — if such a review had to be conducted in the first place. It came as no surprise that the review panel (made up of Leon, Ryan Coetzee and Michiel le Roux and, therefore, seriously lacking in diversity) recommende­d, among other things, his ousting and a return to a fightback-type party.

Good luck to Zille and John Steenhuise­n with their illusion of an SA where race does not matter. They have done a great job of condemning the DA to being no more than a regional party of the Western Cape. Herman Mashaba and Maimane should move swiftly to occupy the space vacated by the DA, and leave the latter to fight for the minorities’ vote with the FF Plus.

While Ramaphosa has the necessary gravitas as head of state and would appear to mean well with his public pronouncem­ents, the time for speeches is over. Far more important now is the translatio­n of his words into meaningful actions, and not just some public-relations steps such as declaring that ANC members with charges against them will have to “step aside” — while they remain in their positions and draw salaries from the public purse. We will need to see action against the blatant abuse of public resources, such as the use of a defence force plane to ferry ANC leaders to a meeting with their Zimbabwean counterpar­ts.

Also, just as president Nelson Mandela was principled enough to denounce Nigeria’s military ruler, Gen Sani Abacha, for the execution of Ogoni activist Ken Saro-Wiwa in 1995, so, too, should Ramaphosa publicly condemn the goings-on in Mnangagwa’s Zimbabwe.

Our country is in trouble. Our economy is shrinking and we have all become poorer than we were in 2009, and yet SA is bereft of real leadership. The ANC is a house divided and dogged by corruption; the DA has turned its back on the black majority and is intent on battling it out with the right-wing FF Plus for the white vote, and the EFF is a dangerous, highly opportunis­tic organisati­on that thrives on conflict.

As a country, we deserve much better. We must all put enormous pressure on parliament to amend the Electoral Act, as directed by the Constituti­onal Court, in time for the 2024 general elections so that, in addition to these damaged parties, we would be able to have individual men and women of integrity to choose from when we cast our votes.

 ?? Picture: Lulamile Feni ?? At a time when the ANC seems vulnerable because of its corruption and arrogance, the DA seems intent on a supposedly colour-blind philosophy that will not appeal to black voters.
Picture: Lulamile Feni At a time when the ANC seems vulnerable because of its corruption and arrogance, the DA seems intent on a supposedly colour-blind philosophy that will not appeal to black voters.

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