PC: AP
The African
National Congress party lost its majority in a historic election
result Saturday that puts South Africa on a new political path for the first
time since the end of the apartheid system of white minority rule 30 years ago.
With more than 99% of votes counted, the once-dominant
ANC had received just over 40% in Wednesday’s parliamentary election,
well short of the majority it had held since the all-race vote of 1994
that ended
apartheid and brought it to power under Nelson Mandela.
The final results are still to be formally declared Sunday
by the Independent Electoral Commission, but the ANC cannot pass 50% and an era
of coalition government — also a first for South Africa — is looming.
The ANC remains the biggest party despite a staggering loss
of support since the last election in 2019 as South Africa struggles with deep
poverty and inequality. The country has one of the highest unemployment rates
in the world and voters also blamed the ANC for shortages of clean
water, electricity, housing and other services.
The ANC will now likely need to look for a coalition partner
or partners to remain in the government and reelect President Cyril Ramaphosa
for a second and final term. Parliament must meet to elect the South African
president within 14 days after the election result is declared.
“The way to rescue South Africa is to break the ANC’s
majority and we have done that,” said John Steenhuisen, the leader of the main
opposition Democratic Alliance party.
Julius Malema, the
leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters opposition party, said that the ANC’s
“entitlement of being the sole dominant party” was over.
The way forward could be complicated for Africa’s most advanced economy,
and there’s no coalition on the table yet. The three main opposition parties
and many more smaller ones were in the mix as the bargaining begins.
“We can talk to anybody and everybody,” ANC Chairman Gwede
Mantashe said on national broadcaster SABC.
Steenhuisen’s Democratic Alliance received around 21% of the
vote. The new MK
Party of former President Jacob Zuma, who has turned against the ANC
he once led, was third with just over 14% of the vote in the first election it
has contested. The Economic Freedom Fighters was fourth with just over 9%.
More
than 50 parties contested the election, many of them winning tiny
shares, but the three main opposition parties appear to be the most
obvious for
the ANC to approach.
Electoral commission Chairman Mosotho Moepya said it was a
time for everyone to keep calm “and for leaders to lead and for voices of
reason to continue to prevail.”
“This is a moment we need to manage and manage well,” he
said.
Steenhuisen said his party is open to discussions with the
ANC, as did Malema. The MK Party said one of their conditions for any agreement
was that Ramaphosa is removed as ANC leader and president. That underlined the
fierce personal political battle between Zuma, who resigned as South African
president under a cloud of corruption allegations in 2018, and Ramaphosa, who
replaced him.
“We are willing to negotiate with the ANC, but not the ANC
of Cyril Ramaphosa,” MK Party spokesperson Nhlamulo Ndlela said.
MK and the far-left Economic
Freedom Fighters have called for parts of the economy to be
nationalized.
The centrist Democratic
Alliance, or DA, is viewed as business-friendly. Analysts say an ANC-DA
coalition would be more welcomed by foreign investors.
DA has been the most critical opposition party for years and
doesn’t share the ANC’s pro-Russia and pro-China foreign policy. South Africa
takes over the presidency of the Group of 20 industrialized and emerging-market
nations next year.
An ANC-DA coalition “would be a marriage of two drunk people
in Las Vegas. It will never work,” Gayton McKenzie, the leader of the smaller
Patriotic Alliance party, told South African media.
DA says an ANC-MK-EFF agreement would be a “doomsday
coalition” given MK and EFF are made up of former ANC figures and would pursue
the same failed policies.
The three opposition parties had a combined share that was
bigger than the ANC, but they are highly unlikely to all work together. The DA
was also part of a preelection agreement with other smaller parties to
potentially form a coalition.
Amid it all, there was no sense of celebrations from
ordinary South Africans, but rather the realization that a rocky political road
was ahead. The Daily Maverick newspaper had a South African scratching his head
with the words: “What Does It Mean For Our Future?” on its front page. The Die
Burger newspaper led with an image of about a dozen political parties’ logos
going into a meat grinder.
South
African opposition parties were united in one thing — something had to
change in the country of 62 million, which is Africa’s most developed but also
one of the most unequal in the world.
The official unemployment rate is 32% and the poverty
disproportionately affects Black people, who make up 80% of the population and
have been the core of the ANC’s support for years. The violent crime rate is
also high.
The ANC has seen a steady decline in its support over the
last 20 years, but by around three to five percentage points each election. It
dropped 17 percentage points this time from the 57.5% it won in 2019.
Nearly 28 million South Africans were registered to vote,
and turnout was expected to be around 60%, according to the electoral
commission.
People lined up on a cold winter night and waited hours after the official poll closing time, with some votes being cast at 3 a.m. the following day. That indicated the desire from many to have their say, but also reflected one of South Africa’s inherent problems — some voting stations had delays because of electricity outages plunging them into the dark.
Source:AP News
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