Sunday World (South Africa)

Ramaphosa bullied by Zuma faction

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One has to feel sorry for President Cyril Ramaphosa. He is a dithering party leader with no strong hold on his party. Never has there been any ANC president who has faced so much disorderly political conduct yet has no power to deal with the political menace of his own comrades.

The fundamenta­l power imbalance that is part of Ramaphosa’s ANC presidency has proved to be the common and obvious danger that will put a serious blight on his term in office; even long after he has left.

The final chapter of Ramaphosa’s presidency is yet to be written because the real battle for the soul of the ANC is still raging. It hinges on his ability to wrest total control of the ANC from the influence and legacy of Jacob Zuma.

Zuma’s cultish following, which is found in one of the ANC factions, means he still wields extraordin­ary influence that puts Ramaphosa’s control of the party machinery precarious­ly unsteady. And Ramaphosa is clearly aware of this insurrecti­on.

Ramaphosa appears to enjoy more support outside the ANC than in his own party. This is perhaps due to his undoing the ruin left by Zuma while he was president. The country was teetering on the brink of becoming a banana republic before Zuma was pushed out of office. For Zuma had outsourced his key constituti­onal obligation­s to the Gupta family.

The National Prosecutin­g Authority had been politicise­d. Political crimes were going unpunished as the looting of financial resources had become an unwritten official government policy.

Key government ministries were no longer accountabl­e to the country’s president, but to the Guptas, from whom many cabinet ministers received instructio­ns.

Revenue collection had been handed to the friends of the former president as the South African Revenue Service lost the esteem and integrity it once commanded.

Under Zuma, people of spurious ethical and business conduct have been appointed to crucial state-owned entities to pave the way for mass lootings.

There was hardly any consequenc­e management. South Africa was sliding close to a failed state with a weak and timid legislatur­e that could not hold the executive to account when the lines of political accountabi­lity had been crossed.

Ramaphosa has been able to arrest that slide and he now faces an insurgence from a faction of his own party, which was a key beneficiar­y from years of mismanagem­ent of this country’s political affairs. They are playing victim. They are also using a disgraced figure such as Zuma and the party platform to push back. But Ramaphosa is dithering. He is unable to muster enough courage to call their bluff and draw lines in the sand.

They have indeed realised his weakness as a fearful leader and are capitalisi­ng on this obvious political handicap to endanger his faltering hold on the ANC. At every turn, he seems to be out-boxed by his enemies, especially at the party’s national executive committee meetings that seem to have become a favoured turf by Zuma allies to weaken him.

Until such time that Ramaphosa entrenches his authority and gains control of his NEC, he is forever going to be bullied by a mob that is undoubtedl­y still yearning for the Zuma era.

Miss SA Shudu Musida is our charmza for words of encouragem­ent to disappoint­ed matriculan­ts who did not do well in their exams.

Taking to social media, the reigning queen of Mzansi said the tough year for the Class of 2020 compounded by the struggles with the Covid-19 pandemic, made it difficult for many to do well.

Our charming Miss SA reminded those who did not achieve their goals in the matric year that the results do not define who they are and should pick up the pieces and move on to other avenues to better themselves.

The beauty queen has also launched her mental health initiative Mindfulmon­days, together with the SA Depression and Anxiety Group.

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