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South Africa: Setback for ANC in local elections
By Barbara Slaughter
8 December 2000
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Although the African National Congress (ANC) has won a majority
of the popular vote in this week's local elections, the result
represents a considerable setback for the government of President
Mbeki. By Thursday morning, 14.5 million ward and proportional
votes had been counted, showing 59 percent support for the ANC
and 23 percent for the Democratic Alliance (DA). This represented
an increase for the parties constituting the DA, which had received
19 percent in the last municipal elections held in 1995 and 13
percent in the general election held last year.
The ANC has so far won a majority in 106 of the 284 newly organised
municipalities, the DA 16 and the Zulu-based Inkatha Freedom Party
(IFP) 10.
Later returns from the rural areas may increase the ANC's share
of the vote, but DA leader Tony Leon was confident that his party
would win 24 percent of the popular vote in the final tally. He
said the DA went into the election with three objectivesto
increase its share of the vote over the general election last
year, to gain an outright victory in Cape Town and to establish
a presence among black voters. He boasted that the party had succeeded
in all its aims.
DA supportersmainly whites and people of Asian and Indian
originturned out to vote in large numbers. The DA even won
some support in the townships, gaining five percent in Soweto
and seven percent in Alexandria.
However, this increased showing was primarily the result of
a significant abstention by the working class black population.
The overall turnout was around 50 percent, a drop of almost 16
percent since last year's elections. The refusal of large numbers
of black workers to go to the polls and vote for the ANC expressed
a deep dissatisfaction with President Thabo Mbeki and his government.
There is a gulf developing between the highly privileged ruling
elite and the vast majority of the population, resulting in a
growing alienation from the parliamentary system that was established
in South Africa just six years ago.
The Democratic Alliance was formed in June this year through
a merger between the Democratic Party (DP), the New National Party
and the Federal Alliance. The Democratic Party was originally
founded in 1959, when members of the United Party broke away to
form the Progressive Party in South Africa's all-white parliament.
In 1970 they became the official opposition. Throughout the 1980s
the Progressive Party lost support in the face of growing black
resistance to apartheid. In the 1987 election, the far-right Conservative
Party won more parliamentary seats than the Progressive Party.
In 1989 the Progressive Party merged with two newly emerged liberal
groups to form the Democratic Party.
A few months later the ban on the ANC was lifted. The DP was
faced with the choice, to ally itself with the ANC or to remain
as an independent force. A few members joined the ANC, but the
majority were hostile to the ANC's association with the South
African Communist Party and the DP emerged as a right wing opposition
"free market" party.
This June it formed the Democratic Alliance with the New National
Party, the party based upon the old National Party that had imposed
the hated apartheid system.
The fact that such a formation can raise its head as a political
organisation in South Africa todayand even win support among
the black populationindicates the extent to which the ANC
has abandoned any pretence of defending the interests of its black
working class supporters.
Since 1994 the ANC has repeatedly promised to address the burning
issues of unemployment, bad housing, inadequate education and
health provision and a lack of the most basic facilities such
as running water and electricity. But the conditions of millions
of families have either not improved or even worsened since the
days of the apartheid regime.
The DA's improved results were not because of any significant
increase in support for its policies. Its campaign was largely
conducted as a negative operation aimed against the record of
the ANC government, especially on HIV/Aids, unemployment and the
provision of basic services.
South Africa has the fastest growing Aids epidemic in the world.
One in five adults are now infected with HIV, with no access to
treatment. The rate of infection is said to be rising at the rate
of 2,000 a day.
The ANC has refused to address this devastating situation.
They have denied anti-retroviral drugs to HIV sufferers, including
pregnant women who need them to protect their babies from infection.
Until very recently President Mbeki even questioned the link between
HIV and Aids.
The DA saw the HIV/Aids issue as a vote winner and Tony Leon
held meetings across the country promising anti-retroviral drugs
to pregnant women and rape victims. He travelled to Europe and
returned with a promise of cheaper drugs.
Before the election, the ANC tried to remedy the situation
by pulling Mbeki out of the Aids debate. They restated the "official
position" of the ANC National Executive Committeethat
"its policies and programmes are based on the thesis that
HIV causes Aids". Their advice was "abstain, be faithful
and use condoms". The issue of HIV/Aids was hardly referred
to in the ANC's local government manifesto.
Although the official rate of unemployment in South Africa
currently stands at 23 percent, the real rate is approaching 40
percent. More than one million jobs have been lost in the official
economy since 1994. The vast majority of new jobs are in the untaxed
and uninsured informal sector, with poverty wages
varying between $45 and $70 a month. The recent fire tragedy at
the Esschem factory in Lenasia, Johannesburg gives some indication
of the conditions to which many workers in South Africa are subjected.
Only two weeks ago a cholera epidemic swept through KwaZulu
Natal infecting more than 5,000 people with the disease. Events
like this are the result of the impoverished and unsanitary conditions
in which millions of families are forced to live.
See Also:
Government cover-up over South African
factory fire
[1 December 2000]
South Africa's ANC government
faces growing opposition
[14 November 2000]
South Africa
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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