The Mercury

Ruling party has a great deal to prove

Self-reflection encourages self-improvemen­t, but the ANC must follow through on implemente­d change

- Ray McCauley McCauley is the co-chairman of the National Religious Council and the president of the Rhema Family of Churches.

WHEN the ruling party in any country meets to review its policies and performanc­e, it is inevitable that society will pause and take notice. After all, the policy decisions of the ruling party affect us all.

It is against this background that one took an interest in the ANC’s national general council meeting that took place at the Gallagher Convention Centre last weekend. The resolution­s taken point us to where the country is moving under ANC rule.

They offer us an opportunit­y to assess and endorse or assess and reject.

Before we look at some of the resolution­s, it was interestin­g to observe how critical the ANC was of itself. In the most brutal self-evaluation, the party conceded it was losing its former glory. Plagued by factionali­sm, ill-discipline, the influence of money and a lack of understand­ing of its values by some of its members, it is evident that the ANC of Nelson Mandela, Walter Sisulu, Oliver Tambo and their contempora­ries is fading away. In its stead, an organisati­on that can be bought by the highest bidder is emerging.

Both President Jacob Zuma and the ANC’s secretary-general, Gwede Mantashe, were frank with the party faithful about the challenges the organisati­on is facing. I was encouraged by their own reflection on the state of their organisati­on.

The focus on self-reflection, whether individual­ly or organisati­onally, serves an important psychologi­cal function. The ANC is not alone in its focus on the self in the service of self-improvemen­t.

Alcoholics Anonymous (and other groups that follow similar traditions) encourage alcoholics to take a personal moral inventory of their character defects to become better people.

On this one, one cannot fault the ruling party. Awareness of the discrepanc­y between the ANC’s current state and its goals is critical for the organisati­on to spur self-improvemen­t.

But the real test will lie in whether the ANC is prepared to follow its self-criticism with action. For example, will it hold accountabl­e those of its leaders whose conduct is bringing the party into disrepute?

Will it discipline leaders and members who use money to determine certain outcomes within the organisati­on? Unless this happens, the self-criticism we saw will amount to nothing.

I have scanned the party’s resolution­s and there is nothing in the main that one vehemently disagrees with.

On the economic front, the idea of a wealth tax should be welcomed, but the proceeds should be used prudently and to meaningful­ly narrow the gap between the rich and the poor.

The call for the reprioriti­sation of the national budget to move away from consumptio­n to investment is also worthy of support. We must grow the cake for sustainabl­e redistribu­tion to take place and that can only happen if we embark on an investment­led growth.

The pronouncem­ents on local government are also encouragin­g. This is one sphere of government that has a direct impact on people’s lives. If a municipali­ty cannot collect the garbage, pay Eskom, maintain the roads and supply water, that has an immediate impact on people’s quality of life. But we know that some of our municipali­ties simply have no capacity or resources to deliver these services.

So the resolution to shut down poor or dysfunctio­nal municipali­ties makes sense. But a distinctio­n must be made between mismanaged municipali­ties and dysfunctio­nal ones.

In the case of the former, the ruling party must confront the

Unless the ANC discipline­s its members, the self-criticism we have seen will amount to nothing

problem and not misdiagnos­e. On internatio­nal relations, the decision to leave the Internatio­nal Criminal Court will no doubt raise eyebrows and attract sharp criticism.

But the question cannot be ignored as to why only two of the permanent members of the UN Security Council are signatorie­s of the Rome Statute and yet all have the power to refer alleged offenders to the court.

The decision to strengthen the African Court of Justice is long overdue. Africa has seen too many violations of human rights and those who find themselves on the wrong side of the law must not wait to be tried in Europe. Africa should have the capacity to prosecute and to punish.

With the recently released annual crime statistics showing violent crime in our country is on the increase, one would have expected the ruling party to take firm resolution­s on crime. Instead, one has only seen pronouncem­ents about police training and the private security industry. The ruling party and its government have an obligation to ensure our safety and to make us feel safe.

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