African National Congress suffers setback in local polls, admits voters are disappointed with it

Published November 5, 2021
Election officials count ballots after the closing of the local government elections, at a farm in Alewynspoort, outside Johannesburg, South Africa, November 1. — Reuters
Election officials count ballots after the closing of the local government elections, at a farm in Alewynspoort, outside Johannesburg, South Africa, November 1. — Reuters

PRETORIA: South Africa’s governing African National Congress took 46 percent of the vote in this week’s municipal elections, the final count showed on Thursday, the party’s worst election outcome since taking power at the end of white minority rule in 1994.

Figures from the electoral commission put the ANC’s biggest rival, the Democratic Alliance, on 22pc of the vote and the Marxist Economic Freedom Fighters on 10pc.

At the last municipal elections in 2016 the ANC got 54pc, at the time its lowest vote share since the end of apartheid.

South Africa entered new political territory with the ruling African National Congress on the verge of losing its dominance and suffering its worst electoral setback in history.

It is the first time the party of Nelson Mandela has received less than half of ballots cast in any election in the continent’s most industrialised nation. But party officials put on a brave face.

“The worst could have happened,” ANC elections chief Fikile Mbalula told reporters. “We fought very hard to get to this point”.

He was adamant “we are not politically obliterated, we are not annihilated, that could have happened”.

The immediate impact of Monday’s voting is local, as parties set about horse-trading to build coalitions in towns and cities.

Looking ahead to general elections in 2024, the results portend badly for the ANC.

The local polls also set the stage for the country’s evolution into a richer multi-party democracy, moving past the dream of a “rainbow nation” and into the reality of balancing myriad competing interests.

“For some time, we’ve been trying to implement democracy in South Africa, but we have not really succeeded up to now to have a truly competitive multi-party democracy,” said Sandile Swana, an independent political analyst.

Missing voters

Major cities such as Johannesburg and Pretoria have had coalition governments since the last local polls five years ago. The trend continues.

Nationally, the ANC lost a majority in even more regions, including in eThekwini metro in former president Jacob Zuma’s stronghold province of KwaZulu-Natal province.

Only two out of three potential voters registered. Of those, less than half actually cast ballots.

For the first time, the ANC was in trouble and they couldn’t hide the fact that they were scared.

It’s hard to remember now, but in the first democratic elections in 1994, the ANC’s dominance was far from assured.

But after Mandela ascended to the presidency, the party expanded its electoral success over the next decade until it controlled almost all major cities, and held a super-majority in parliament.

However, over the last 15 years, the ANC’s popularity has declined sharply.

Now dipping below the 50 percent mark for the first time, the ANC no longer appears invulnerable.

“It’s a psychological barrier, and now it’s same for national election,” said William Gumede of the Democracy Works think tank.

After 27 years in power, the ANC has no one to blame for South Africa’s woes. Unemployment, always stubbornly high, has hit a record 34.4 percent.

Mismanagement and corruption have left the country unable to guarantee a steady electricity supply. Water cuts and sewage leaks are common.

Published in Dawn, November 5th, 2021

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