Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Parochial interests inhibiting growth of politics

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IT IS expected that in modern democracie­s that embrace free and fair elections, and respect for civil liberties, political parties will induce the system to be responsive. The expectatio­n has stimulated discourse across knowledge domains that the shortfalls of democracy in Eastern Europe and Latin America can be ascribed to the absence or weakness of political parties.

Citizen views of political parties are a long-standing issue, which has taken on added significan­ce in South Africa due to their proliferat­ion.

The 2019 national and provincial elections, for example, were contested by 48 political parties. However, many of these parties do not perform well in elections but continue to participat­e in politics. In this context, research has shown that many of the parties are highly personalis­tic and depend on the personal resources of their leaders for party-building, rarely ending up challengin­g the status quo. The parties’ strengths and weaknesses are also primarily linked to the party leaders’ background­s and political experience.

It is, therefore, natural to ask what the unique attraction points of Mmusi Maimane’s new party, Build One SA (Bosa), are that will convince South Africans that it can promote and protect their interests where others have failed. Maimane, the former leader of the DA, has made some bold promises, including putting “a job in every home in this country”.

But how sustainabl­e is SA’s democracy when there are so many parties? Will the launch of Bosa strengthen representa­tion and responsive­ness in the SA political landscape? To answer these questions, one should not look further than the evolution of opposition politics since 1994.

Post-apartheid South Africa has witnessed the launch of various new political parties around every election. A few of the parties achieved limited success, others have survived, albeit as perennial underachie­vers, and most fade into political oblivion. Generally, the electoral performanc­e of the newly formed parties over the two decades was dismal. The parties include, among others, the Congress of the People, the Independen­t Democrats, and GOOD. In comparison, the EFF has performed relatively well since its launch in July 2013.

Few will dispute that opposition parties have played a significan­t role in not only challengin­g the dominance of the ANC but also consolidat­ing democracy and reshaping the institutio­nal structure of party representa­tion. A common characteri­stic of opposition politics is their parochial interests that have stifled co-ordinated attempts to unseat the ANC. There was a time when opposition parties moved towards a genuinely unified force. However, since then, opposition politics can be generalise­d as being fluid and fragmented, lacking co-ordinated long-term strategies. As a result, sentiments about the opposition are broadly negative.

Insofar as Bosa is concerned, a troubling question will be how this party will deal with the pessimism about opposition parties that has deepened over the past decade. Stimulatin­g greater interest from some citizens who lack trust in opposition politician­s’ ability to reshape the nature of democratic politics. But it seems as if Maimane has a plan to arrest the declining opposition party influence.

In a world of declining political party influence, Maimane would have devised plans to avoid getting the tag of having launched what an African leader called electorall­y insignific­ant “telephone booth parties”. Maimane’s vision for Bosa stemmed from the One South Africa Movement, an organisati­on he launched after resigning from the DA in 2019.

The plan of Bosa to unite independen­t candidates under an umbrella organisati­on to contest the 2024 elections is commendabl­e. The One South

Africa Movement did the same in the 2021 local government elections, enabling several independen­t candidates from community-based associatio­ns under this organisati­on to be elected as councillor­s in various municipali­ties across the country. This had sought to bring politics closer to those alienated from mainstream parties, by opening positions on the list to all citizens.

As commendabl­e as Maimane’s plans are, his party will face turbulent waters, depending on how he navigates his own interests and values around the collective. In fact, the demise of opposition politics tended to be linked to political entreprene­urs who sought to manipulate the party for their own benefit.

While it is too early to predict how Bosa will perform in the 2024 elections, harnessing the energy of independen­t candidates through engaged and substantiv­e internal deliberati­on could play a significan­t role in an environmen­t of limited funding and high levels of political intoleranc­e. That way, Maimane would avoid falling into the trap of many newly formed political parties that failed in unifying political parties.

 ?? PROF SETHULEGO MATEBESI ?? Associate professor and head of the Department of Sociology at the University of the Free State
PROF SETHULEGO MATEBESI Associate professor and head of the Department of Sociology at the University of the Free State

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