South Africa's Political Wars Resemble Our Own

When I came to South Africa, I thought I was escaping the way our news programs are totally dominated by political coverage even though the election is months away.
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Cape Town, South Africa: When I came to South Africa, I thought I was escaping the way our news programs are totally dominated by political coverage even though the election is months away and everyone knows none of this polling and hyped-up speculation matters until October.

The fight between the Democrats and Republicans is an obscenely costly affair which none of our political pundits care to investigate in terms of why so much is being invested and what the likely payoffs will be, and to whom.

Business Day, the Wall Street Journal of South Africa, featured an essay recently with a headline that offers insight into the motivation of politicians in both countries: "Public Office Now Just a Wat to Pillage the State."

In the U.S., of course, we have two principal parties, almost like two wings on a plane. The Republicans, now the captive of the hard right and the Democrats, firmly ensconced in the center, partial to corporations but with some issues and positions that appeal to liberals and even, parts of the left.

Obama is posturing at being a progressive on domestic social issues while refusing to crack down on Wall Street fraud, and promoting Bush-style war on terror military interventions. Romney is running on a one point program: blame Obama for everything wrong in the world.

Both parties are beholden to money and the people who supply it. We are talking billions! Of course, this immense money power corrupts the whole system. The Supreme Court has just ratified the decision that allows it.

In South Africa, corruption doesn't grow out of the competition between two parties with more in common that you'd think. Here, there's only one party that really matters--The African National Congress (ANC) that is riven by factions, ambitious politicians and an environment of jostling for power and position. Corruption is embarrassingly all too blatant while basic needs go unmet.

No one quite expected this when the world cheered as Nelson Mandela was swept into office in 1994. He had an ambitious program for ending poverty and transforming the country. People spoke of the changes in South Africa as a "miracle," branding the country a "rainbow nation."

Reality quickly set it. Racial division was only one of many economic and social problems all impervious to quick fixes. The government soon found that it had to overcome many forms of resistance to change including the vested interests of the business sector, the status quo orientation of international agencies like the IMF and World Bank as well as the go-slow counsel of Britain and the U.S.

A long suppressed black middle class wanted what it thought was its due and wanted it now! Inexperienced politicians luxuriated with new perks and fancy cars quickly putting its needs as an elite ahead of demands from its constituencies. Corruption soon surfaced and was largely ignored. The unity of the liberation struggle gave way to power games of every kind.

The Mail & Guardian reports political scientist Achille Mbembe saying in a debate in Johannesburg, "after 18 years of relative complacency and self-congratulatory gestures" the ANC was realizing South Africa was an ordinary country and not a miracle."

South Africa's miracle of the 90s "can now be better categorized as a stalemate", he said. " One of the main tensions in South African politics is that its constitutional democracy did not erase the apartheid landscape."

But, then, AIDs emerged as a fatal health problem catching the country off guard. Its health infrastructure had been crippled by years of apartheid underfunding. Early projections suggested that virtually the entire State treasury would have to be diverted to stop millions from dying. There was denial and stigma.

That was one of the realities confronting Mandela's deputy and successor, Thabo Mbeki. That may help explain his attempts to downplay the AIDS threat and find others to blame for it. Mbeki had ambitions notions of an "African renaissance," and turned South Africa into a force on the Continent while also alienating members of the ANC at home who resented what they saw as arrogance and elitism.

Although re-elected, he became a divisive force in the party and was toppled before he could finish his second term. This was all evidence of democracy within the ANC, but also the emergence of other splits and splinters, as well as chaotic factions with the ANC's own youth League demanding nationalization of the mines. (This demand was treated as an example of "radical populism" by some, and as a tactic to shake down industrialists for bribes by others even thought it did point to a certain laxness in the government's unwillingness to crack down on business. Sound familiar?)

Former ANC exile and military chief Jacob Zuma toppled Mbeki with populist rhetoric -- he sang a Zulu song, "Bring Me My Machine Gun" during his camapaign even though he was caught up in a personal corruption scandal that he narrowly slithered out of.

Now, some of the same pressures facing Mbeki are facing him, as supporters rally to his Deputy President Kglalema Mothlane or Zuma's Minister of Settlements, the charismatic former guerilla turned billionaire, Tokyo Sexwale. Both seem poised to want to replace him

Meanwhile, the ANC is running a key policy conference to debate a document calling for a "Second Transition." Mothlane recently sneered at the idea in a speech saying, "Second Transition! Second Transition! From where to where? What constituted the first transition?"

In response, President Zuma, has, according to the Mail & Guardian, "launched a veiled attack" on Kgalema for questioning the "Second Transition." The crusading newspaper also reports:
"Supporters of ANC president Jacob Zuma will stop any attempts to discuss leadership issues at the ruling party's policy conference this week.

This is the unyielding view of sources within the ruling party, who told the Mail & Guardian they will "suppress" any attempts to discuss succession within the ruling party."

So much for the state of internal debate, yet clearly Zuma knows he's facing a serious internal fight.

Even as the politicians scramble for positions, criticism mounts of how South Africa is being governed. Law Professor Koos Malan, challenges the way public office here is misused, writing, "public office somehow entitles public office-bearers to exploit the power and authority of public office to achieve maximum private gain... and to receive public accolades for these successes."

As the country prepares to mark Nelson Mandela's 94th birthday in July, South Africa is also facing a dangerous downturn in its economy thanks to the world financial crisis, and soaring crime and unemployment.

The spirit of many here remains infectious but there's trouble on the horizon.

News Dissector Danny Schechter writes the Newsdissector.net blog. He is in South Africa making a film about the making and meaning of a major movie underway on Mandel's life. His latest books are Blogothon and Occupy: Dissecting Occupy Wall Street (Cosimo.) He hosts a program on ProgressiveRadioNetwork.com. Comments to dissector@mediachannel.org

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