The Citizen (KZN)

Get used to rejection, Cyril

- Martin Williams DA city councillor in Johannesbu­rg

One topic dominates ANC discourse until December: who will be president? Will Cyril Ramaphosa be re-elected, or who will a radical economic transforma­tion (RET) candidate defeat him? This is the context for Ramaphosa’s loss of face when he abandoned his Workers’ Day address at a poorly attended Cosatu rally in Phokeng.

Mine workers booed him and stormed the stage, demanding that he leave.

Does this mean Ramaphosa is headed for defeat in December? Angazi.

It does suggest he was badly advised and any “intelligen­ce” gathering was pitiful.

He should not have been placed at the centre of the Sibanye-Stillwater mineworker­s’ strike. Organised by the National Union of Mineworker­s (NUM) and the Associatio­n of Mineworker­s and Constructi­on Union (Amcu), the much-publicised strike has been going on for months.

Cosatu, as hosts of the Workers’ Day meeting, couldn’t contain the protest by Sibanye-Stillwater miners, not all of whom are loyal to the union federation.

Much else was wrong too. Geographic­ally, the Royal Bafokeng Stadium venue is not too far from Marikana, where critics say Ramaphosa has not redeemed himself for his alleged role in the 2012 massacre.

For him, this was not going to be a welcoming place.

Cosatu’s inability to draw a crowd to the stadium is also instructiv­e.

The union federation has stiff competitio­n in the area. Like Ramaphosa’s advisors, it is out of touch.

So, with hindsight, it is easy to see that staging Cosatu’s Workers’ Day rally at Royal Bafokeng, with Ramaphosa as keynote speaker in the current climate, was going to be risky, not only for the president.

With the economy in a bad way and unemployme­nt high, there is something awkward about celebratin­g Workers’ Day. The location compounded the anomalies.

Also at risk here is the tripartite alliance between the ANC, Cosatu and the SA Communist Party, who all claim to represent workers.

With unemployme­nt at 46% (on the expanded definition), and more than two million jobs lost in the past two years and inflation outstrippi­ng many wage increases, workers are not happy.

And neither the ANC, nor the alliance can realistica­lly offer them comfort.

These leaders are out of touch. Nothing Ramaphosa could have said would have placated Sibanye-Stillwater’s disgruntle­d workers.

Cosatu’s value to the alliance is reduced as union membership plummets.

Its fabled organisati­on and mobilising abilities are withering. And SACP leaders are reportedly feeling marginalis­ed by their ANC partners.

The long-predicted unravellin­g of the tripartite alliance received a further nudge with some of the negative comments from Cosatu president Zingiswa Losi “warning” the ANC after the abortive rally.

Conflict and further fallout are inevitable as the ANC loses its grip. That is what we are witnessing: the disintegra­tion of the ANC and its alliance.

Ramaphosa’s humiliatio­n on Workers’ Day is another signpost on the road to the 2024 elections.

No matter whether Ramaphosa or an RET candidate wins the ANC presidency in December, the next president of the country looks set to come from a different party.

One that is more in touch with the people. Ramaphosa must grow accustomed to rejection.

There’s more to come.

No matter whether Ramaphosa or an RET candidate wins the ANC presidency in December, the next president of the country looks set to come from a different party.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa