The official opposition, the Democratic
Alliance (DA), may well end up strengthened relative to its
pre-alliance support as the Democratic Party (DP) in 1999. But the loss
of much of its New National Party (NNP) wing to a coalition with the
African National Congress (ANC), before and after the floor crossings
by well over half the DA local councillors to rejoin the NNP, has been
a harsh setback for the DA. The most serious effect for the official
opposition is a significant loss of momentum in its steady growth over
the past five years or more.
The events have wider implications, however. They compromise the
democratic principle of primary accountability to voters and they have
reinforced the image and the political structure of South Africa as a
one-party dominant state. These effects are injuries to the collective
ambitions of South Africans to live in and consolidate a world-class
democracy.
It is not that coalitions are intrinsically undesirable. If a party’s
supporters endorse the arrangement, if the parties involved can defend
their constituency’s interests within the co-operation and if there is
genuine give-and-take on policy issues, a coalition can broaden the
policy base of governance and help to secure the vital interests of
minorities. The problem with the ANC-NNP coalition is that the
likelihood of these conditions being met seems rather remote. Not only
did the ANC allow its earlier and crucially important coalition with
the National Party (NP) under FW de Klerk to deteriorate into
hostility, as has its coalition with the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) in
KwaZulu-Natal, but it is clearly imposing its policies and priorities
on its long-standing alliance partners to its left — the South African
Communist Party (SACP) and the Congress of South African Trade Unions
(Cosatu).
Is there any real basis for a balance of compromise in its new
coalition with the NNP? There is more than a whiff of opportunism and
greed for power in the present arrangement, from both sides.
Similarly, floor crossing is also not necessarily always undesirable.
The main argument in favour of floor crossing is what the ANC and the
NNP have termed “freedom of conscience”. They also argue that this
fluidity in politics allows representatives to respond to changing
conditions and opportunities in political life. The United Democratic
Movement (UDM), the IFP and the DA, who have all at one time or another
supported the principle, argue however that the representatives in a
proportional list system are not free to cross the floor to other
parties without proper consultation with the voters at large, because
they are elected not as individuals but simply as units on a party
list. With manifest justification they have condemned the latest spate
of floor crossings as a cavalier disregard of voter choice.
Floor crossing has merits in a constituency system in which
representatives are elected as individuals, but it is deeply and
blatantly non-democratic in a list system. Many observers were
surprised that the Constitutional Court overlooked this basic
democratic principle of a popular mandate in its ruling, so much so
that Steven Friedman, of the Centre for Policy Studies, in an SAFM
interview, expressed concern about party-political bias among the
Constitutional Court judges.
In responding to the floor crossing and the DA’s consequent loss of
most of the local authorities that it has controlled since 2000, DA
leader Tony Leon has predicted that opposition voters will see the
ANC-NNP coalition for what it is and punish the NNP accordingly in the
next elections in 2004. Furthermore, even after the recent defections,
the DA can rebuild opposition with a broader team of party
representatives and workers than it had in 1999. How realistic is his
optimism?
In previous analyses in Focus, evidence from a March 2002 MarkData
Omnibus poll (see State of parties and health of democracy, Focus 26,
2nd quarter 2002) suggested that the majority of voters who do not
support the ANC want strong and principled opposition. This does not
mean that they oppose coalitions (see the March poll and the June 1999
poll: How to use that huge majority, Focus 16, November 1999). But
co-operation between parties is endorsed mainly in order to promote
development or to provide political minorities with leverage, certainly
not to augment the already dominant position of the ANC.
A more direct indication of likely voter reaction lies in current
trends in support for political parties. Since the last Focus poll of
party support in March 2002 results from a July/ August poll have
become available. This preceded the actual floor-crossings, but by
July/August the voters would have had time to contemplate the shape of
the co-operation between the ANC and the NNP.
What are the indications?
In Table One we present the trend in party support since just before
the June 1999 elections up to the most recent July/August poll this
year1.
We note that DA support increased between 1999 and 2001 as it absorbed
the NNP. It then fell back to its 1999 levels when the NNP leadership
and some representatives defected to the ANC-NNP coalition. More
recently it appears to have recovered and may still be rising. The NNP
support, which had been all but eclipsed while the party was in the DA
alliance, has certainly strengthened but seems to have peaked at around
half the support that the DA has. On the face of it this would suggest
that the DA has retained around half of the support that it gained
while in alliance with the NNP.
But something else has also happened. The gyrations of the politicians
have left very many voters confused or disillusioned. People not making
a choice of party or indicating that they will not vote in a future
election, have increased and their numbers may have stabilised at a
damagingly high level. These uncertain or disillusioned voters, as
indicated in Table Two, are particularly numerous where they are needed
most — in KwaZulu-Natal, Western Cape and Gauteng — the provinces in
which the ANC is not super-dominant.
This current exit of voters has a particularly distorting effect on
the party standings in the Western Cape and KwaZulu-Natal. Some idea of
what would happen if these voters stay away at election time is given
for the two provinces in the August poll, in Tables Three a and b. In
Tables Three a and b the respondents making no choice are excluded from
the percentages to simulate an election outcome if they do not vote.
Estimates are presented in detail to reflect very small party
support.
In KwaZulu-Natal the NNP has recovered some support, as in the
national results, but the DA retains a very clear advantage over the
NNP. However the ANC gains hugely as a result of the disillusionment
among mainly opposition party voters, the IFP included. With the
Minority Front of Amichand Rajbansi, it may not even need the NNP to
help it to secure a majority.
The Western Cape is different. Here the ANC has not strengthened since
2001 but the NNP seems to have recovered the bulk of its support that
had moved into the DA alliance. If the July-August pattern holds, the
ANC-NNP could garner nearly two-thirds of the vote in the
province.
The reason for this strong recovery by the NNP in the Western Cape can
be detected if one analyses the results according to population group.
For reasons of brevity only the results for the ANC, the DA and the NNP
are presented in Table Four.
In the abridged results in Table Three we note that while the NNP has
lost ground since 1999 among all groups, it has remained fairly strong
and has fallen least among so-called coloured people, mostly resident
in the Cape. The DA has in fact gained among all groups except whites,
whose support level has remained on a high plateau. The DA is larger
than the NNP among all groups except among coloured people, which also
helps to account for the NNP’s strength in the Western Cape.
Around August, therefore, indications were that many former NNP
supporters are indeed likely to punish the party for its connivance
with the ANC, and remain with the DA. But enough NNP supporters had
bought the idea of being part of a governing coalition to suggest that
the NNP’s strategy for survival can work. If the high levels of apathy
and disillusionment among opposition supporters persist, the ANC (with
the NNP where necessary) will control all provinces and the vast
majority of local councils. From poll results in previous issues of
Focus, however, it is clear that NNP supporters expect their party to
be able to hold its own and defend their interests in the coalition.
Whether the ANC will allow this to happen has yet to be seen. If so it
will be a first for that party.
The challenge for the DA, on the other hand, is twofold. First it must
make sure that it brings voters back from the cold of disillusionment,
and, in its opposition it must test the quality of a coalition that was
entered into by the ANC mainly to keep the DA out of any participation
in government. The August results show that these are tough tasks. But
if the DA can recover its lost momentum, they are achievable
objectives.
NOTE:
The MarkData Omnibus polls are strictly comparable over time. They are
based on personal interviews with 2,200 adults in stratified random
samples covering all areas, both rural and urban, including all types
of residential areas from traditional and commercial farming areas to
houses, shacks, apartments and hostels in cities.