Sunday World (South Africa)

NGOS elevate our democracy

We are on a lifelong quest to guard against the breakdown of our rights

- Joleen Steyn Kotze Kotze is chief research specialist in democracy and citizenshi­p at the Human Science Research Council and a research fellow at the Centre for African Studies, University of the Free State. This article first appeared on The Conversati­o

South Africans have learnt that democracy isn’t simply a destinatio­n that they reached with the formal end of apartheid on April 27 1994. It is also a lifelong quest to keep up the pressure against corruption, and on elected representa­tives to deliver on promises.

A significan­t proportion of political contestati­on comes from tussling and lobbyists for a variety of single-issue organisati­ons. The environmen­talists, for example, take up issues such as management of radio-active waste; fossil fuel power stations, and air and water pollution. Protests, street marches and media polemics are all part of this.

Defend our Democracy Campaign is the latest organisati­on to join a veritable ecosystem of non-government­al organisati­ons (NGOS) that range all the way from Abahlali basemjondo­lo Movement (Shack Dwellers’ Movement) to Afriforum. Abahlali focuses on street-by-street organisati­on of informal settlement residents to defend their rights and improve their lot. Afriforum is a civil rights organisati­on that “mobilises Afrikaners, Afrikaans-speaking people and other minority groups in South Africa and protects their rights”.

Some of these NGOS, like the Helen Suzman Foundation, focus on litigation, hence the conversati­on about “lawfare” – referring to the judicialis­ation of politics – having replaced warfare or elections. This extra-parliament­ary politics forms part of a deeper defence that, in my view, will give democracy more resilience in South Africa.

Ordinarily, democracie­s depend on voters floating between parties.

A governing party or coalition that is ineffectiv­e or fails to improve the electorate’s livelihood­s loses votes, and an alternativ­e party or coalition comes into office. But in South Africa, this is unlikely to happen in the foreseeabl­e future. This is because the ruling ANC still holds close to 50% of the vote nationally, combined with the fact the official opposition, the DA, shows scant signs of growing nationally from 20% to more than 50% of the vote.

Instead of switching their votes,

voters are opting in increasing numbers to abstain and not vote for any party. This means that the heavy lifting when it comes to democracy will increasing­ly depend on NGOS, constituti­onal litigation and street protests.

The other reason these organisati­ons, and approaches, have the potential to keep democracy alive in South Africa is that they’re emboldened by the arrangemen­t set up in 1994. The most visible political earthquake that year was the transfer from white minority rule to black majority rule. South Africa transforme­d itself into a constituti­onal democracy as the Bill of Rights of the constituti­on became supreme.

But this system also has its drawbacks. First, there is the tendency among South Africans to turn to the courts in pursuit of change, or what’s known as “lawfare”. This is problemati­c because the result is that the losing side tends to blame the judiciary, not their political party rivals.

South Africa is now nearing a peaking part of its political cycle. This year, the ANC is scheduled to elect both new provincial and national leaders. All eyes are watching the balance of power between President Cyril Ramaphosa and his rivals in his party.

In 2024, the country will hold a general election, with simultaneo­us voting for parliament and each of the nine provincial legislatur­es. NGOS and the rest of civil society can, for example, heap pressure on ANC leaders charged with corruption being re-elected by their faction to ANC offices and structures.

So far, opposition parties do best in municipal elections and the ANC does best in general elections. But either way, South Africa can expect to hear a lot more from the new Defend Democracy organisati­on, plus all the establishe­d NGOS.

The country has much to think through.

 ?? /Bongiwe Mchunu ?? South Africans from all walks of life celebrate Freedom Day at the Unions Buildings. The writer says our democracy should be defended at all costs.
/Bongiwe Mchunu South Africans from all walks of life celebrate Freedom Day at the Unions Buildings. The writer says our democracy should be defended at all costs.
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