The Citizen (Gauteng)

RAMAPHORIA WEARS THIN

VOTES DROP: BAROMETER FOR 2019 SHOWS RULING PARTY HAS TO PULL UP ITS SOCKS

- Eric Naki ericn@citizen@co.za

Using recent by-elections as a barometer, support for the ANC hasn’t been boosted by President Cyril Ramaphosa and the party may well see a further decline in votes during the 2019 elections, political analysts say.

Ramaphoria has dissipated and it don’t look so good for his organisati­on – analyst.

Ramaphoria has worn off – and if the ANC’s electoral performanc­e during recent by-elections in several provinces are anything to go by, the ruling party has to work harder if it wants to stem the tide against it.

Political analyst Daniel Silke said if this week’s by-election results in North West and Northern Cape and several others where ANC votes have dropped, are a tiny barometer of the sentiment toward the ANC, they should pull up their socks for 2019.

Silke said there has been less electoral enthusiasm for the ANC under President Cyril Ramaphosa, hence the party did not do well in Wednesday’s Northen Cape and North West by-election.

“There is no electoral miracle brought [about] by the Ramaphosa factor for the ANC,” he said.

According to the Independen­t Electoral Commission, both the ANC and the DA retained their 2016 local government seats in Wednesday’s by-elections in the North West and Northern Cape.

But the DA has increased its tally in Siyancuma Municipali­ty, while newly elected ANC councillor Tshepo Confidence Khumalo won Ward 21 in Moses Kotane Municipali­ty in North West. He won with a reduced margin of 63.56% of the votes cast compared to 69.66% in the 2016 elections.

In Ward 4 in Siyancuma Municipali­ty in the Northern Cape, the DA increased its victory margin to 50.63% compared to 43.82% in the 2016 municipal elections.

Wednesday’s voter turnout was 63.78%.

Silke said it was interestin­g that the arrival of the new ANC leaders led by Ramaphosa coincided with a spike in the ANC by-election performanc­e since the beginning of this year.

“You would have thought that the feel-good factor that came with Ramaphosa would have translated into votes for the ANC, but so far it has not,” Silke said.

He said the ANC would be disappoint­ed to learn that it was unable to capitalise on the new administra­tion and the Ramaphosa factor.

Even the EFF showed an improvemen­t in this particular by-election on Wednesday. Julius Malema’s party seemed to be gaining traction in North West after the party’s Bongani Patrick Cekiso took an ANC seat in Ward 15 at Ditsobotla municipali­ty last April.

The ANC struggled to make electoral ends meet in other provinces too. In seven by-elections held in April in Gauteng, North West and Western Cape, the DA retained five seats, with the ANC winning Ward 92 by-election in Johannesbu­rg.

However, the ruling party managed to outdo the DA only in Ward 9 in Bela Bela Municipali­ty in Limpopo, where the ANC’s Boetie Maname unseated a DA candidate with 48.16%. Although the DA was defeated, the ANC failed to achieve the 49.09% that the DA received in the 2016 Municipal Elections.

Similarly the ANC lost an attempt to wrest Ward 18 ANC from the DA in Buffalo City in the Eastern Cape. The DA retained the seat it had won in the 2016 municipal elections with an increased margin of 95.92% of the votes cast compared to 88.08%.

Silke said these underperfo­rmances by the ruling ANC pointed towards a failure of the expected Ramaphoria effect.

“There has not been any great enthusiasm for the ANC if these by-elections were to be used as a barometer. It doesn’t seem the end of Zuma has brought great enthusiasm for the ANC,” Silke said.

However, Silke said although erratic fluctuatio­n on the ANC votes may occur countrywid­e, he

End of Zuma has not brought more enthusiasm for the new administra­tion.

Daniel Silke political analyst

wasn’t sure whether the ruling party would perform badly in the upcoming 2019 national election.

An electoral political analyst foreshadow­ed the recent electoral outcomes last month after the re-emergence of the IFP in former ANC stronghold­s in the province KwaZulu-NAtal.

Consultant Dawie Scholtz said the Mthonjanen­i by-election in rural KwaZulu-Natal on July 26, could be seen as “another data point indicating a swing away from the ANC in rural KZN”.

That result saw 52% of the voters supporting the IFP, representi­ng an uptick of 5%, and a drop of 8% for the ANC.

Like Silke, Scholtz said this suggested bad news for the ruling party. The ANC received 62.15% of the vote in 2014 nationally. –

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