World | Other World Stories
ANC no longer the only answer
On a recent evening at a swank downtown eatery here, a table of young black entrepreneurs sipped cocktails and talked politics by candlelight. They were symbols of the new South Africa: Raised in all-black townships, they now own suburban homes, pricey cars and stocks.
Johannesburg: On a recent evening at a swank downtown eatery here, a table of young black entrepreneurs sipped cocktails and talked politics by candlelight. They were symbols of the new South Africa: Raised in all-black townships, they now own suburban homes, pricey cars and stocks.
To their parents, politics meant one thing - the African National Congress (ANC), the liberation movement that has been the ruling party since apartheid was brought to an end in 1994. Now the party is on the verge of a split, and to these young South Africans, that sounds like progress.
"To date, the ANC's been the obvious choice. It's time to change a little bit," said Ndumiso Davidson, 28, who works for a private equity firm. "We fought for freedom, and freedom was attained."
That fluid loyalty might be typical in most multiparty systems. In South Africa, however, it hints at what some here think is a turning point toward a new revolution in this nation's young democracy: a future in which the ANC is not in charge.
Careerism allegation
After nearly 100 years as an organisation, the ANC is racked by infighting and beset by criticism that it has succumbed to factionalism and careerism. The party last month forced out President Thabo Mbeki, a rival of ANC leader Jacob Zuma, himself a polarising populist accused of graft. Mbeki loyalists have announced plans for a new party that they say will reclaim ANC values.
No one thinks the ANC will lose next year's elections. But some pollsters say voter disillusionment could erode the party's two-thirds majority. That is partly, analysts say, because the ANC is led by liberation-era figures whose revolution rhetoric is losing resonance among generations that have spent much or all of their lives in freedom.
"This is the party that overcame the apartheid struggle. This is the party of Nelson Mandela. I think we haven't completely got through that phase. But young people are losing their attachment to the ANC. They want it to deliver," said Adam Habib, a political scientist who is deputy vice chancellor of the University of Johannesburg.
Since 1994, the voting bloc loyal to the ANC has declined steadily, according to a recent University of Cape Town study. But, the study said, their votes have not typically shifted to opposition parties.
The ANC dissident group, which has outlined no policies, seems to want to tap that constituency. One insider told the Mail and Guardian newspaper that its goal would be to "modernise" and "drop the language of Stalinism".
On a recent afternoon on the sun-drenched Soweto campus of the University of Johannesburg, Ipeleng Mashao, 21, said he would vote only if a splinter party were on the ballot.
The accounting major ticked off a list of grievances: the cloud of corruption surrounding Zuma, the Youth League leader's vow to "take up arms and kill" for Zuma, the dismissal of Mbeki just months before his term was to end.
"For my grandfather, who was a member of the ANC, it was his freedom," Mashao said. "Now I know the ANC will be on the television tomorrow for another fraud case."
The trouble, many youths said, is that opposition parties - the most powerful of which won 12 per cent of the vote in 2004 - seem only to scold the ANC, not offer new ideas.
"The ANC is what people on the ground know," said Jacob Molapisi, executive director of a national umbrella group of nongovernmental organisations. "Any splinter group will have to spend its time justifying itself on the basis of the ANC."
- Los Angeles Times-Washington Post News Service
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