The Star Early Edition

Diss the twangers at your peril, ANC

- EUSEBIUS MCKAISER

THIS past weekend, the ANC indicated its intention to woo Gauteng’s black middle-class residents. The fear is that the party could lose a metro or two in the province during next year’s local elections if black middle-class voters stay away or if those who previously voted ANC choose to support another party.

Well, since the ruling party is most responsive to voters on the eve of an election, now might be a good time to give the ANC some unasked-for advice, as a member of the so-called black middle class.

First, engage us by showing complexity in your understand­ing of “black middle class” – complexity we don’t get from the DA, your feared alternativ­e home for those black middle-class voters who previously voted ANC.

By this I mean demonstrat­ing an awareness of the obvious fact that the black middle class isn’t a homogeneou­s group. The very term is incoherent, even if many of us, myself included, use it often. Some black middle-class people are first-generation graduates with extended family members who live in poverty. We are middle class, but very precarious­ly so.

Others have parents either with money from successful business ventures or undeserved political sponsorshi­p, or parents who are degreed profession­als without wealth but who are certainly neither poor nor working class.

In other words, the “black middle class” should be segmented into the heterogene­ous strata that we occupy, and meaningful dialogue with us should speak to the overlappin­g, but also the differenti­ated, lived experience­s and varied concerns and aspiration­s of these groups.

A simple victory the ANC can quickly enjoy over the DA is to take the black middle class seriously enough by not rendering us a bunch of identical individual­s with the same life narrative.

I’d like to see political and state engagement with the black middle class that isn’t insensitiv­e to the conceptual flaws in the tag “black middle class”.

Nothing warms the heart of a voter more than being taken seriously, and affirmed. You quickly forget even the flaws of your political suitor when that happens. The EFF doesn’t care much for the black middle class (despite the fact that many of us share their analysis of the state), and the DA shows no regard for black middle-class critics, pretending we’re recalcitra­nt.

Secondly, it would help if ANC leaders stopped belittling educated black people.

Only when the party starts taking the black middle class seriously will it start to win their hearts and minds

Our working-class black parents made sacrifices for some of us to “twang”. Many of us, now in our 20s and 30s, grapple with how to undo the impact of being anglicised through our education. The black middle classes – all its subsets – aren’t apolitical and ahistorica­l. We live and experience the same daily racism and racialism as poor black people.

So we have a vested interest in supporting a political party that takes historicis­m seriously in how it makes sense of every nook and cranny of South African life. That means, yes, understand­ing race as a major fault line in contempora­ry South Africa.

The DA doesn’t get this, and so it isn’t a natural home for black middle-class voters with even a shallow understand­ing of colo- nialism and apartheid’s legacies.

But when you belittle a black middleclas­s person – be it a writer, an artist, a critic or even a black middle-class person in the DA – the rest of us feel dissed too.

It is possible for me to be both alienated from the DA’s brand and deeply offended, as a “clever black”, when you mock the accent and life experience­s of, say, DA leader Mmusi Maimane or DA member Lindiwe Mazibuko.

The reason is simple: we are not merely black. We are an intersecti­on of many different social markers, including language, accent, schooling, education, sex, gender, geography and so on. And that is why many black middle-class voters experience local politics as a dilemma: vote for a DA that doesn’t mind your being a “clever black” but doesn’t take racial justice seriously, or vote for an ANC that wants you to feel bad for being a hard-working, educated black person battling in the untransfor­med economy while comrades eat at the trough?

The ANC can still win the hearts and minds of the black middle class. But the test isn’t what you say on the eve of an election. It is how you routinely engage us that will determine our political preference­s over time. Certainly you won’t win black middleclas­s votes by mocking or ignoring us. If you do, we might vote for the party of Dianne Kohler Barnard or that of Julius Malema. Which is your worst nightmare?

 ??  ?? INSULTED: Middle-class black South Africans of all political persuasion­s feel offended when members of the ANC mock the accents of educated blacks such as the DA’s Mmusi Maimane, left, says the writer.
INSULTED: Middle-class black South Africans of all political persuasion­s feel offended when members of the ANC mock the accents of educated blacks such as the DA’s Mmusi Maimane, left, says the writer.
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