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South Africa's ANC fails to get 2/3 of seats

CELEAN JACOBSON   04/25/09 05:05 PM ET   AP

Jacob Zuma

PRETORIA, South Africa — The leader of South Africa's long-dominant ANC was treated like a president-elect Saturday after his party swept parliamentary elections _ though not with the two-thirds majority it won easily in the last vote.

A split in the ANC and questions about Jacob Zuma's fitness to govern after sex and corruption scandals no doubt contributed to the party's loss of support. But Zuma insisted he was not disappointed, telling reporters: "We have won a decisive majority."

But not the two-thirds of the 400-member parliament that would allow it to enact major budgetary plans or legislation unchallenged, or change the constitution _ though Zuma says charges from the opposition he planned to undermine the constitution were unfounded.

Parliament elects the president in South Africa, and was expected to vote Zuma into office May 6.

Saturday, as he arrived to hear election officials give the final tally and declare the April 22 vote was free and fair, Zuma was surrounded by photographers. He clasped his hands before him and looked down almost shyly as he made his way to a front row seat in the fairgrounds hall where the vote has been counted. He was soon letting loose his deep laugh as he chatted with aides and well-wishers and signed autographs.

Then Zuma, statesmanlike in a dark gray suit and gold-flecked tie, appeared live on state television to deliver a 20-minute speech in which he promised to speed delivery of jobs, houses, school and clinics to the black majority that was denied so much under apartheid, and which has seen slow change since the ANC first took over in 1994.

On foreign policy, he pledged to continue helping to seek stability in Zimbabwe, Congo, Sudan and Somalia. He said he had met earlier in the day with FIFA president Sepp Blatter to pledge his support for the 2010 World Cup that South Africa will host and which it hopes will build its image as the continent's leading country.

The African National Congress took 65.9 percent of the nearly 18 million votes cast Wednesday. It was allotted 264 seats, three short of two-thirds, and 33 fewer than it had held in the last parliament. Some of its seats in the last parliament were gained when lawmakers switched parties after the vote.

The main Democratic Alliance got 67, up from 47. The ANC breakaway party, known as COPE, got 30; it did not exist the last time South Africans voted. The Inkatha Freedom Party got 18, down from 23. Nine other parties shared the remaining seats.

The seats were allotted by election officials according to a formula after the final count was certified.

The ANC won 69.69 percent of the vote in the last elections in 2004, when it was led by Zuma's rival Thabo Mbeki. It won 66.35 percent in 1999. In the country's first all-race vote in 1994, the ANC won 62.64 percent of the vote.

The party's rivals will make much of the slide, however slight.

It could be linked to the split in the movement that defeated apartheid. A new, black-led party formed by disgruntled former ANC leaders close to Mbeki was placed third in the race, with just over 7 percent of the final tally.

Mosiuoa Lekota, who served in Mbeki's Cabinet and broke from the ANC late last year to form COPE, said voters were swayed by the argument that South Africa needs a strong opposition to curb any dictatorial impulses in the ANC.

"We needed to complete our democracy," Lekota said.

The ANC's showing also could be a message from voters that want some limits on the party. ANC rivals had argued Zuma should not have the two-thirds majority needed to legislate unchallenged or to change the constitution.

Zuma, 67, was fired by Mbeki as deputy president in 2005 after he was implicated in an arms deal bribery scandal. After protracted legal battles, prosecutors dropped all charges against Zuma earlier this month, saying the case had been manipulated for political reasons and the criminal charges would never be revived. But they said they still believed they had a strong case.

In 2006, Zuma was acquitted of raping an HIV-positive family friend. He has been ridiculed for his testimony during the trial that he believed showering after the encounter, which he said was consensual, would protect him from AIDS.

Zuma joined the ANC in 1959 and by 21 he was arrested while trying to leave the country illegally. He was jailed for 10 years on Robben Island, alongside Nelson Mandela and other heroes of the anti-apartheid struggle.

He left South Africa in 1975 for 15 years of exile, when he led the ANC's intelligence department. Following the lifting of the ANC ban in 1990, Zuma was one of the first of the group's leaders to return to South Africa.

The ANC sees the populist Zuma as the first leader who can energize voters since the legendary Mandela.

Some say Zuma is too beholden to unions and leftists, and will not be able to fulfill his economic promises. At the end of the campaign, Zuma was talking not about creating jobs, but staving off job losses.

___

Associated Press Writer Donna Bryson contributed to this report.

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PRETORIA, South Africa — The leader of South Africa's long-dominant ANC was treated like a president-elect Saturday after his party swept parliamentary elections _ though not with the two-thirds...
PRETORIA, South Africa — The leader of South Africa's long-dominant ANC was treated like a president-elect Saturday after his party swept parliamentary elections _ though not with the two-thirds...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mabila
I am not exhausted defending this President!
08:45 AM on 04/27/2009
Malibuyeeeeeee!!!

Amandla!!
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jeanrenoir
08:30 AM on 04/26/2009
What a tragedy that the leading hope of sub-Saharan Africa, and by far the biggest light in Africa's endless darkness, should so obviously be slip-siding into a political morass like Zimbabwe's. Zimbabwe was once a beautiful and prosperous country, but then Mugabe's typical Arican kleptocracy turned it into the cholera-ridden hell hole it is today. Mugabe drove out the prosperous white farmers who fed the country well, replaced them with incompetent black farmers, and the rest is histrory, written in the starved carcasses of poor blacks littering the countryside. Soon, the white elite of South Africa will go elsewhere, and South Africa will be left to the thieves and jackals, like Zimbabwe, and will implode. It's tragic that at the very moment that America has not only its first black president, but also its smartest and best president since FDR, if not Lincoln, a man who could do so much for Africa, Africans themselves continually commit political suicide, in their hapless and tragic ignorance, as they are doing now in South Africa. From Mandela to Zuma in a couple of decades. What a surprise! What a tragic continent!
outnow
Ban the bomb
09:04 AM on 04/26/2009
The white elite vs. the thieves and jackals - not a very promising choice for South Africa. I am disappointed in the status of things in South Africa, too. I had hoped that being free of rule by the white colonialists would free Africa. Maybe democracy by itself cannot overcome ignorance. You could say the same of events in the U.S. Yes, Obama is educated but I will be surprised if he is able to repair the damage done by Bush and throw off the financial oligarchy here.
09:19 AM on 04/27/2009
you are clearly very ignorant. SA isn't the hope of the continent and the continent is not a tragedy as you describe it. either you have never been to africa or you are one of those that white elites in SA that see their future diminishing,
10:26 PM on 04/25/2009
This is progress, the more parties represented, the more accountability. Look what happened in Zimbabwe after the first election, the ruling party consolidated power and the democracy was destroyed. Look what Chavez is doing in Venezuela by closing down opposition media, jailing opponents, and nationalizing private property. We should feel very optimistic about S. Africa.
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Cinnamonape
06:56 PM on 04/25/2009
I remember when the right wingers in this country were all telling us that Gatsha Buthelezi of INKATHA really was the next leader of South Africa, how he was supported by the vast majority of blacks and was the only leader of the Zulu people. Reagan feted him, he was constantly interviewed by all the MSM and on TV. They marginalized the ANC and other parties.

18 seats in a 400 seat Parliament?

I wonder if this is where the Republican Party is heading?
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03:54 PM on 04/25/2009
This is an important step for South Africa in that the ANC will now be held accountable by a meaningful opposition in Parliament. Expect fewer corruption scandals in the near future.
03:22 PM on 04/25/2009
Can't wait to hear Zuma's advice regarding HIV.


Carrots? Cucumbers? Perhaps
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03:52 PM on 04/25/2009
He once claimed that if you take a shower after se x, it will wash the HIV away.
08:40 AM on 04/26/2009
Obviously, he meant the HIVE on his...
03:20 PM on 04/25/2009
To test the theory that some ppl were voting on race, we should send them Bush, and let see if the whites and the coloreds vote for him...
12:02 PM on 04/25/2009
TWO THIRD OR NOT MAJORITY RULES,,,,APPPPPPEEEEE
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
baba2nde
in search of the meaning of being
11:46 AM on 04/25/2009
What is the matter with AP? "Fails to get 2/3 majority" is a loser headline. The rest of the story shows that - even after splintering - ANC won 65.9%, 0.7% shy of supermajority.

Get with it or get out of the way.
02:20 PM on 04/25/2009
Charlayne Hunter-Gault of NPR (you remember her for being one of the first two Black students at the University of Georgia) had pointed out that it was a foregone conclusion that the ANC would win by a majority. She had reported before the election that the main thing to watch in the election was whether the ANC maintained its 2/3 majority. I think some of the other reporters followed her lead, as she is a respected interpreter of the news from South Africa.
10:09 AM on 04/25/2009
The only hope South Africa had would have been for Helen Zille to be the president.

Unfortunately, the country is doomed to have eternal ANC misrule.
11:44 AM on 04/25/2009
YEAH RIGHT,HELEN ZILLE TO GO BACK TO APARTHEID,,KEEP DREAMING
11:53 AM on 04/25/2009
Indeed. i voted DA. i despise Comrade Zuma. he will lead us into Zimbabwehood.

Zille was voted the best mayor in the world. I wish SA had given her the opportunity to be the best President in the world. But SA's majority make Sarah Palin look like a MENSA candidate.

i am a person of colour, so im not motivated by racism. just observation when i say most south africans who support the anc are idiots.
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Fernando
My Micro-bio is empty? Really?
05:34 PM on 04/25/2009
Nicely put.
03:54 AM on 04/26/2009
I've been to Zimbabwe and Wasilla. The people in Wasilla are way more stupid. Believe me.
05:40 AM on 04/25/2009
It's hard for me as someone who is an African immigrant to the United States to have an overabundant compassion for whites and "coloureds" in South Africa.The dividing line is always Blackness in terms of economic and political power whether it be the apartheid of America before 1985 or that one of South Africa. I say 1985 because only after fifteen to twenty years after the voters rights act (1965) in the United States could you see significant gains in terms of political representation and economic empowerment among blacks vs. the white majority . Funny how the "coloureds" can only form alliances with the whites. It is time now for the whites and colored's to march, get shot at, live in prison, create an international movement towards justice, so that they can be included in the story of perfecting the constitutional democracy of the new South African. But I bet they only have grievances and look to the white west to declare South Africa failed, because brown men rule it. Typical.
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08:16 AM on 04/25/2009
As one of your 'white' South Africans I agree with your sentiment regarding race and Blackness, I just feel you jump to simplistic conclusions about South Africa, portraying a real lack of knowledge about our story beyond the headline of racism/oppression.

For example, how do Trevor Manuel, Ebraihim Rassol, Ferial Haffajee, Patricia De Lille, Neville Alexander, Wilmot James, Allan Boesak, Lyn Brown, Geraldine Frazer Moleketi, Tony Ehrenright, Phillip Dexter or Pregs Govender.

I thought I'd come up with fewer names, some at least to back your point but honestly I cannot think of 1 well known Coloured who fits in your world. Sorry. So, if you don't want outsiders to make simplistic comments about your world I suggest you don't do the same.
09:56 AM on 04/25/2009
Your observations imply that black South Africans voted for Zuma because he was the best man for the job, and white and mixed-race South Africans voted for the DA because they don't want to be aligned with blacks. Blacks voted with their conscience and everyone else just voted along racial lines. I would suggest that the situation is far more complex than that and there are probably equal percentages across races (white, mixed race and black) of individuals who voted along racial lines and who voted with their conscience. Your last line about white South Africans and their grievances with the brown men who rule the country being typical speaks volumes about your position. Only time will tell us about the integrity of Zuma and his ability to move South Africa forward.
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Faraja
Greed is Good
03:50 AM on 04/25/2009
White? Mixed race,? African? They need to come together and see themselves as South Africans!

All the best Uncle Jacob Zuma!
01:06 AM on 04/25/2009
In our analysis of present day South Africa, we must try and dig a little deeper and not always repeat the same things. Let's ask ourselves: Why did Nelson Mandela show his support for Zuma and the ANC in the way that he did? My view is that Madiba is concerned that South Africa does not go the route of ethnicity, but non-racialism. This is different from multi-racialism, that does not integrate people but merely assimilate them into a dominant (usually white-dominated) system. Zuma therefore cotninues that deepening of the non-racial process, and the election of a good person (but someone who is Xhosa) to head up the new party COPE was probably a fundamental error since it increased the anti-Zulu perception. Madiba does not want South Africa to slide into a Rwanda.

On the question of the "mixed-race" group (or "coloureds" as we are known in South Africa), this is one issue that the ANC is getting dead-wrong, particularly on affirmative action. I would hope that they reflect on their loss in the Western Cape and ensure that "coloured" people do not feel marginalised in the new South Africa, as so many does.
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08:23 AM on 04/25/2009
Mandela & the ANC. I think he understands that history is a glue that holds our society together. One of the great strengths of the U.S. Constitution is it's age, it gets amended rather than replaced, so there is continuty, evolution and stability. I think Mandela recognises that we can be right and wrong, opressed and opressors, that the strenght of a nation is built up over time and when things go partly wrong you don not throw out everything and start over. This process allows us to see over time where we are right and wrong, to take responsibility and correct our mistakes.
12:00 PM on 04/25/2009
I have it under good authority that Madiba loved the idea of COPE, would in fact have supported and endorsed COPE, but for his loyalty to the ANC that he supported his entire life.
01:56 PM on 04/25/2009
If that was the case, he would not have come out in public for Zuma. His ailing health would have been a good fodder to shun Zuma and sit the campaign out. The Great Madiba believes in unity and change from within, not without, what he has done his entire life. The COPE cabals are sore loser who were unable and even incapable of initiating an ideology debate that would stir the ANC towards their vision. The COPE is a bunch of Black elitists and oligarchy who forgot where they came from once they got to power. President Mandela understands that and so do the White members of the ANC. This is why Madiba stayed home and it is why even White ANC members did not follow the sore losers.

Please read about the ANC, pay a visit to South Africa and you would understand the current political situation there.
01:58 PM on 04/25/2009
If that was the case, he would not have come out in public for Zuma. His ailing health would have been a good fodder to shun Zuma and sit the campaign out. The Great Madiba believes in unity and change from within, not without, what he has done his entire life. It is more than just loyalty to the ANC. The COPE cabals are sore loser who were unable and even incapable of initiating an ideology debate that would stir the ANC towards their vision. The COPE is a bunch of Black elitists and oligarchy who forgot where they came from once they got to power. President Mandela understands that and so do the White members of the ANC. This is why Madiba stayed home and it is why even White ANC members did not follow the sore losers.

Please read about the ANC, pay a visit to South Africa and you would understand the current political situation there.
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12:03 AM on 04/25/2009
His election wouldn't bother me so much except that the guy believes that showering afterwards will prevent you from getting infected with HIV. This in a country where it's estimated that over 10% of people over the age of 2 are infected with the disease! I was hoping the Mbeki days were over, but this doesn't bode well for the battle against HIV in that country.
02:17 AM on 04/25/2009
Do you really think he believes that?

Come on, he can't be THAT stu pid.
08:19 AM on 04/25/2009
Well Zuma did say that. Look it up!
09:24 AM on 04/25/2009
President Reagan placed a certain amount of faith in horoscopes, tarot, etc.
I live in Utah and you'd be surprised at the stuff people believe.
02:57 AM on 04/25/2009
another dumb wh1te person who treats facts and proofs as an after thought.