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South Africa: conflict in ANC signals deepening social tensions
By Chris Talbot
22 December 2007
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The election of Jacob Zuma as president of the African National
Congress (ANC) over current South African President Thabo Mbeki
expresses the growing social tensions in South Africa. But neither
Mbekis nor Zumas faction has any answers to
the problems that face the mass of the population.
The bitter rivalry between the two factions only serves to
underline the fundamental bankruptcy of the nationalist programme
of the ANC. The struggle within the ruling elite must be the harbinger
of intensified class conflict within South Africa that, because
of the countrys strategic economic and political role, will
have continent-wide significance.
Zuma polled 2,329 votes compared to Mbekis 1,505, after
36 hours of wrangling over the voting procedures at the deeply
divided ANC conference. The other top five positions in the ANC
were won by the Zuma camp with similar voting margins.
Zuma is backed by the trade union bureaucracy COSATU and the
South African Communist Party (SACP). He has relied on building
up support in working class areas, especially in the townships,
where there is deep hostility to the ANC government and its free
market policies.
More than half the population now lives in poverty, with nearly
9 percent living on less than one dollar a day. The divide between
rich and poor is widening. From the standpoint of the capitalist
class, South Africa is a success story. Gross Domestic Product
has grown for the last seven years; it is currently rising by
5 percent a year. But while the mining companies and finance houses
have seen profits rise, the majority of the population has not
benefited. Mbekis finance minister Trevor Manuel has kept
to World Bank targets for interest rates and inflation. Public
spending increases have been limited to infrastructure projects
like the stadiums being built for the 2010 World Cup.
The Mbeki leadership was clearly taken aback by the Zuma camps
wide margin of victory. Saki Macozoma, a top South African businessman
and ally of Mbeki, told the Financial Times, Weve
been a bit naïve. Politics have been smooth and collegial
for such a long time. The chattering classes had seen the Zuma
phenomena as something that would fizzle.
This gross miscalculation is an expression of the extent to
which the ANC elite have distanced themselves from the mass of
the population. They lead lives cocooned by their wealth and are
oblivious to the sufferings of the majority.
COSATU and the SACP were able to secure a victory for Zuma
by winning the leadership of local ANC branches. Each branch sends
one delegate to the conference. Some 70 percent of the SACPs
51,000 membership are under 35. This predominantly youthful membership
has been able to oust established, conservative ANC elements.
At its conference last July, old guard allies of Mbeki were
voted out of the leadership. SACP General Secretary Blade Nzimande
denounced the 1996 class project of the Mbeki leadership,
referring to the pro-market policies introduced at that time,
and called for a socialist turn in the ANC. It was
this leftward shift in the SACPs rhetoric that produced
Zumas victory at the ANC conference.
Mbeki and his team are officially allowed to remain in government
office until 2009, when presumably Zuma would be elected president.
However, given the increasingly bitter divisions between the two
camps, and with growing expectations amongst workers that something
will be done to alleviate their conditions, a smooth transfer
of power seems unlikely.
Indeed, only one day after the ANC election result, according
to the BBC, the acting head of the National Prosecuting Authority,
Mokotedi Mpshe, announced that he now had enough evidence to charge
Zuma with corruption and that a final decision on when to take
action against the latter was imminent. Zuma has been
plagued by such allegations; his supporters counter that the charges
against him are being orchestrated by Mbeki. Zumas former
financial adviser Schabir Shaik was jailed after an arms corruption
court case in 2005, although the case against Zuma was put on
hold. Zuma was sacked from office as deputy president by Mbeki
and then faced a further trial on rape charges last year, in which
he was acquitted.
In reality, the entire ruling stratum has enriched itself from
the ascension to power. Leading former ANC militants are now millionaire
businessmen and sit on the boards of global corporations. That
the Mbeki faction is even considering another trial reveals their
recklessness. They are prepared to run the risk that the ANC as
a whole will be further discredited in their desperation to cling
to power.
Other leading figures are already positioning themselves for
the coming power struggle. If Zuma is tied up in court proceedings,
his deputy, Kgalema Motlanthe, may come to the fore. Motlanthe
was a political prisoner under apartheid, then general secretary
of the National Union of Mineworkers. He has support throughout
the ANC and backed Zuma during the court cases. He gave up his
position as ANC general secretary to become Zumas deputy.
Motlanthe is playing the role of mediator at present and attempting
to smooth over the internal divisions. Answering press questions,
he said that the never-ending agony of legal threats
against Zuma would put the ANC in a very difficult position. The
political editor of Business Day has suggested that Motlanthe
could be the next president, presumably with Zuma in jail.
The Zuma camp is likely in any case to attempt to take advantage
of its decisive victory by demanding a role in government. Zumas
supporters may even try to replace Mbeki ahead of the scheduled
presidential elections.
The divisions in the ANC are deep, but they do not reflect
fundamental differences of perspective. Ever since the 1950s,
the SACP has been a key supporter of the ANCs nationalist
and pro-capitalist politics. Now, however they recognise the need
to present a left face to diffuse opposition and keep
the ANC in power.
Zuma has carefully cultivated an image that he is a man
of the people, as opposed to the aloof ex-academic Mbeki.
One management consultant told the Financial Times, He
is the type of man who can talk to a president one minute and
a Zulu peasant the next. He is a modern man yet he has not lost
touch with his roots.
Behind this public persona there is no evidence that he will
push for more than cosmetic changes in the current pro-market
policies. He made no criticism of Mbekis economic direction
when he was deputy president and will not challenge the course
that the ANC has pursued since the end of apartheid.
Over the last few months, Zuma has held meetings with sections
of South Africas ruling class to allay their fears. He addressed
the dining society at the Rand Club, pinnacle of the white establishment,
and held lunches with top business people organised by Citigroup,
assuring them there would be no U-turn on important matters. He
also travelled to Britain and Austin, Texas, where he held more
meetings with businessmen, promising them there would be no change
in South Africas economic life if he became president.
Neither the SACP nor COSATU is calling for a shift in the fundamental
economic orientation of the government. Motlanthe told the press
there would be no change in economic policies and no payback
to COSATU for its support. COSATU as a federation has no
voting rights in the national conferencethey have speaking
rights. So there is no way they can even claim we put you
there so its payback time.
COSATU general secretary Zwelinzima Vavi repeated this, saying,
So much has been said that Zuma has to pay a debt to COSATU.
There have been leftist policies in the past few years. JZ [Jacob
Zuma] is not an organisation. It is up to the members of the ANC
to decide policy questions and the leadership must implement these
policies.
This piece of double-speak was repeated by SACP deputy secretary
general Jeremy Cronin, who told the press there is a left
shift under way already. In fact, ANC economic policy was
fixed at the beginning of this year and supports the current line
of Mbeki and Manuel. In so far as the SACP has a different policy,
it is the call for national economic development within capitalism.
It is not a socialist policy. This is what they call their Medium
Term Vision in a policy document.
Their industrial policy calls for a national debate
between the ANC and the business community over development
policy. Vavi recently told the Financial Times that
the government should put our industries first. He
calls for the economy to be shifted towards the labour-intensive
sectors to promote jobs. Unfortunately the mining sector
is not labour intensive, he said. This is more than unfortunate.
The ANC government, with the support of COSATU and the SACP, has
destroyed tens of thousands of mining jobs in recent years. This
has played no small part in pushing unemployment up to 40 percent
in some areas of the country.
According to Vavi, the government should promote growth by
allowing inflation to rise to 9 percent. It is currently running
at between 3 and 6 percent. Such a policy would inevitably affect
the working class by driving up the price of food and other essentials.
To imagine that a government could engineer just a slight inflation
is a delusion, especially when the world economy shows every sign
of heading towards stagflationi.e., prices rising but the
economy in recession. The results of runaway inflation can be
seen next door in Zimbabwe.
The present level of growth has been achieved by making South
Africa a prime site for investment and a centre for finance capital
in Africa. A higher level of growth could only be achieved by
attracting more investment, which would create even greater social
divisions. Growth in itself is not the problem. It is one of ownership.
When a tiny minority own the corporations, mines, factories and
banks, wealth inevitably accumulates in their hands, while the
majority of the population who create that wealth through their
labour are driven into ever greater poverty.
In so far as the Zuma faction has revealed different economic
priorities than the Mbeki faction, their implications are reactionary
and harmful to the interests of the majority of ordinary people.
But these differences are of a contingent character. What has
to be recognised, however, is that the conflict has a definite
political and historical significance.
The ANC has operated for the past 13 years as a government
of national unity. Differences existed behind the monolithic façade,
but they were contained and smoothed over. The very public and
acute nature of the Zuma-Mbeki split indicates that the ANC can
no longer present itself, as it could when Mandela came to power,
as the natural and historically chosen movement to lead the nation.
Its years in office have revealed it as a party of big business
that has no claim to represent the interests of the vast majority
of working people in the towns or the countryside.
A generation is coming to political maturity that has grown
up since the fall of the apartheid regime and whose political
experience has been shaped by an ANC government doing everything
in its power to benefit the rich and big business. The cracks
that are emerging within the ruling regime create an unprecedented
opportunity for the working class to intervene. But they must
prepare for that politically by making an independent assessment
of the situation. Workers have to evaluate the political struggle
that is going on inside the ANC in the light of their own class
interests, which are opposed to those of every faction of the
South African ruling elite.
See Also:
Zuma's election heralds instability
[22 December 2007]
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