The ANC’s internal life has been
complicated recently by factionalism, ie by rivalries between the
supporters of particular local or regional personalities. In 2001 the
national leadership dissolved the Limpopo organisation temporarily
because of factional strife, and also replaced elected provincial
officials in the Free State and Gauteng after feuding reached
unacceptable levels. ANC analysts argue that factionalism is ‘wholly…
caused by corruption… the scramble for power… and a tendency for
comrades to regard local structures as their own fiefdoms’. Elected
public offices are well remunerated today and therefore the stakes
involved in winning or losing are very high in poor communities.
Moreover, the practice of politically preferential tendering has
created a situation in which companies support certain ANC members so
that they can get contracts. However, not all local dissent is
‘careerist’ – some of it is motivated by principled opposition to
policies. Personal rivalries often split the party along racial or
ethnic faultlines. In the Western Cape, for example, rivalry tends to
be between Africans and coloureds. Patronage plays a role in garnering
support at branch level; housing scandals in Gauteng recently involved
local councillors who allocated Reconstruction and Development
Programme dwellings to family members and friends. But there are
structural limitations to this. Patron-client relations are more
prevalent when there are high localised inequalities and the state has
a weak local presence, but the South African government has an
unusually extensive penetration for a developing country and therefore
the role that patrons can play is limited. The ANC established a
national deployment committee to try to prevent no-holds-barred power
struggles ‘on the part of opportunists who were interested only in
personal material gain’, but the committee made some questionable
appointments and was subsequently disbanded. In any case, the party’s
rank and file are cynical about leadership calls for good behaviour
when the higher levels continue to tolerate corruption. At all levels
of government, the ANC’s imperative to use political power to extend
black control of the economy all too easily becomes conflated with
venal rent-seeking and rewards for support. ANC leaders resist the
suggestion that the party is becoming increasingly oriented to the
demands of electoralism and parliamentary politics, but the evidence
suggests that this is what is happening. The increasing tendency for
ANC members to become preoccupied by the competition of rival factions
for public office may be a reassuring symptom that our politicians are
adopting habits that are quite normal in a liberal democracy.
Aside from ideological concerns, the ANC's internal life is
complicated by what the leadership insists is a relatively "new
phenomenon", what it calls factionalism, or rivalries between the
supporters of particular personalities. Though such competition may
assume an ideological dimension, its real causes, ANC officials
suggest, are a consequence of the extension through the movement of
patron-client relations between local or regional personalities and
ordinary ANC members.
The ANC's national leadership justified the temporary dissolution of
the Limpopo organization in 2001 with reference to factional strife,
that is jockeying for party positions and public office by rival
personalities and their followers. Nationally appointed "interim
leadership structures" also replaced elected provincial executives in
the Free State and Gauteng in 2001 after feuding between different
regional executives reached unacceptable levels of intensity.
In Gauteng one errant group was led by Isaac Mahlangu, the mayor of
Khayalami metropolitan council until his displacement as a consequence
of Khayalami's incorporation into the East Rand municipality and his
subsequent "redeployment" to the lesser post of chair of the Gauteng
Tourism Authority. Competition for municipal office became especially
accentuated in the run-up to the municipal elections because of the
reduction of the number of councillors resulting from the creation of
fewer local authorities.
ANC analysts argue that factionalism is "wholly and singularly caused
by corruption... the scramble for power, state resources and a tendency
for comrades to regard local structures as their own fiefdoms". All
elected public offices in South Africa are today quite generously
remunerated and in poor communities the stakes involved in winning or
losing such positions are consequently very high. In his interview with
Helena Sheehan in January 2002, Jeremy Cronin illustrated the point by
citing the example of one of his parliamentary colleagues:
"... there was an older African woman from a rural area, an ANC
MP. She lives in one of the parliamentary villages. What happens in
these circumstances, because she is the one resources person now in her
extended family, is that all the grandchildren get sent to stay with
her in the parliamentary village and they get sent to school in and
around Cape Town. So its not just her that has tenuously joined the new
elite, but it ripples down to the grandchildren, who now have an option
of escaping the marginalisation of some ex-bantustan area and schooling
for at least a few years in Cape Town".
The death threats directed at Thandi Modise, an MP who had the
temerity to challenge Winnie Madikizela-Mandela for the leadership of
the ANC Women's League during the League's 1997 conference help to
confirm the zero sum quality of leadership contests around messianic
and authoritarian leadership. Amongst her supporter base, especially
strong in the weakly structured branches located in Gauteng's
peri-urban squatter camps, Madikizela-Mandela nurtures her popularity
with well-publicised demonstrations of personal charity, donating
blankets and food in the aftermath of fires and other local
emergencies.
In the case of municipal politics, the practice of politically
preferential tendering that has now become an accepted convention in
all ANC controlled local governments helps to raise the stakes still
further. In its Through the Eye of a Needle document the
National Working Committee complained of "companies" that "identify ANC
members that they can promote in ANC structures so that they can get
contracts", suggesting that such interests could even sponsor the mass
"buying of membership cards to set up branches that are only ANC in
name".
Such charges may be overstated. It is also the case that the ANC tends
to denigrate as "careerist" local dissent that may be motivated by
quite principled opposition to its policies. However there are
identifiable examples of commercial interests attempting to influence
the course of internal ANC politics. In the Mpumalanga Parks Board
scandal, one of the groups tendering for a take-over of the provincial
game reserves made donations to the ANC Youth League through one of its
provincial officials, James Nkambule, with the aim of consolidating his
control over the provincial executive of the Youth League. More
generally, the Youth League has developed especially strong connections
with the black business community, owning a substantial block of shares
in Tokyo Sexwale's mining consortium.
Rendering personal rivalries more complex is the extent to which they
can sometimes align competing groups along racial or ethnic faultlines
in the party's social following. In the Western Cape, a province in
which factionalism is believed to be especially entrenched at branch
level, the rivalry tends to be between Africans and coloureds. In
Limpopo province, premier Ngoako Ramathlodi's opponents in building
their following in the late 1990s exploited the feeling that Venda and
Shangaan speakers were either inadequately or, alternatively,
disproportionately represented in party structures and public
office.
The role of patrons in activating support at a branch level was
illustrated in 1998 with the emergence of the United Democratic
Movement (UDM). In its strongholds around Cape Town, Umtata, and
Richmond, the UDM was initially built upon the whole-scale defection of
certain ANC branches in response to the new allegiances of local
notables. Recent housing scandals in Gauteng involving local government
councillors and officials using their power to allocate "RDP" dwellings
to kinsfolk and friends supply an indication of the kinds of exchange
commodities that may provide the currency for certain kinds of
patronage.
Even so, and despite the ANC's own contentions about the spread of
factionalism within the movement, there are structural limitations to
the degree to which patron-client relations can influence South African
politics. Patron-client relations are likely to be most prevalent in
situations of high degrees of localised inequality in which landlords
expect political loyalty from tenants and wage labourers and in which
the state has at best a weak local presence.
A rough parallel to this sort of relationship may exist between South
African rural chiefs and households dependent on access to communal
land. But in any case few households are wholly dependent on land. In
many developing countries in urban areas, patrons play a positive role
in "linking lower status individuals to national institutions,
by-passing rigid bureaucracies". In the South African context,
bureaucracy has unusually extensive penetration for a developing
country: to cite a key example, a universal system of pension cover has
existed for four decades. In a context in which citizens derive their
benefits from the bureaucracy directly the roles that patron "brokers"
can play are limited.
To judge from the assertive and critical audiences ANC local
government candidates confronted in the 2000 local government
elections, even in very poor rural areas, the deferential attitudes to
elected officials one would expect in a patronage system are
exceptional rather than normal.
ANC leaders hope to discourage the spread of factionalism through
invocations of an idealised selfless "new cadre". But those of its
policies that strengthen vertical or top down relationships of power
within the organization are likely to strengthen its hold rather than
weakening it. The establishment of a national deployment committee was
meant to ensure that the appointment of senior elected officials such
as provincial premiers or mayors would not result in "the emergence of
a corrupt mafia-type phenomenon".
In the wake of the bitter internal leadership contest in Gauteng in
1998, ANC constitutional strategists were determined to prevent "no
holds barred struggles for ANC leadership on the part of opportunists
who were interested only in personal material gain at all costs". In
his report at Stellenbosch in December 2002, the ANC secretary-general,
Kgalema Motlanthe, admitted that the committee had made some very
questionable decisions, especially with respect to mayors in major
cities, and that, after NEC members had raised doubts about its
integrity, the committee's operations were halted.
Rank and file receptions of leadership's exhortations of good
behaviour are likely to be somewhat cynical given continuing evidence
of high level toleration of corruption: the "rehabilitation" in late
2002 of Tony Yengeni while still facing charges related to the arms
contracting scandal is a case in point.
Yengeni's recent career supplies a telling instance of the kind of
cronyism that the ANC leadership professes to deplore. His publication
during 2001 of a series of full page newspaper advertisements
protesting his innocence in receiving a discounted vehicle from one of
the arms contract bidders was paid for by his friend, Mcebisi Mlonzi,
the CEO of the Zama Resource Corporation, a consortium that had
recently won a controlling interest in the former state forestry
corporation, after making a R50,000 contribution to the wedding
festivities of ANC Youth League executive member and top civil servant
Andile Nkhulu. Yet by the end of 2002, though still facing trial,
Yengeni's restoration to the group of middle echelon leaders who
appeared to enjoy favour within the presidency was signalled by his
appointment to the NEC mission that was dispatched to the Eastern Cape
to restore order after disputed provincial ANC elections.
Delegates at Stellenbosch responded to such signals by re-electing him
to the national executive. In local, regional and provincial and even
the national settings in which office holders operate the ANC's
principled imperatives to use political power to extend black control
of the economy all too easily become conflated with venal rent-seeking
as a consequence of the strong social compulsions to reward or repay
supporters, friends and kinsfolk.
It remains an orthodoxy within the ANC that the organization is not
merely a political party, that it remains a liberation movement.
Through this characterization, its spokesmen suggest that it embraces a
much broader constituency than social cleavage-based political parties
and that it retains an intimate relationship with different kinds of
organs of "civil society". Today its officials even claim that within
its following "the fault lines of the past are starting to disappear",
citing as evidence the establishment of new branches in Pretoria's
Afrikaans-speaking suburbs.
For certain authorities this diversity means that the ANC must remain
a movement of "debate and political discussion". For others it means
that such debate must be circumscribed by the necessity to "mobilize
and organize all the social forces", that it should be "a broad
movement representing a combination of social categories", including
the white "middle strata".
This kind of analytical distinction corresponds to the more general
academic usage of such terms as "catch- all" parties.
However the ANC in its self-conception as a liberation movement is not
merely referring to its broad social appeal. It also assumes that its
role continues to be one of liberation, "of Africans in particular and
black people in general from political and economic bondage" and that
this goal depends upon its own efforts to transform government
institutions and to re-organize economic life.
Given the likelihood of resistance to such efforts, as the authors of
a 1998 discussion paper noted, the "National Liberation Movement" would
have to extend its influence "to all levers of power: the army, the
police, the bureaucracy, intelligence, the judiciary, parastatals, and
agencies such as the regulatory bodies, the public broadcaster, the
central bank and so on". Deployments of ANC personnel to senior posts
within such agencies were needed to "counter the influence of the
former ruling class" that still "predominated in the civil service, in
the economic sector, in the media". In such aspirations, the ANC has a
hegemonic or absolutist conception of politics, in which the "mission
of the party is to realize a social order revealed to leadership", in
which the "party is the highest value excluding state, nation, family
or other social group" and in which "formal government is merely an
instrument of achievement".
But in its heroic projections of its national revolutionary mission
there is an increasing air of artificiality. Though party ideologues
like to fulminate against the strength of "counter revolutionary forces
in the economy, civil service, media, courts, etc", their protestations
look increasingly far fetched in a context in which, for example, sixty
per cent of public service management is black and recently
appointed.
Did the audience in Nelspruit really believe ANC notable Dumisane
Makhaye when he told them at the provincial ANC meeting that "our
enemies have spent sleepless nights plotting our undoing... now and
again the enemy carries out counter offensive attacks against us using
the counter revolutionary network it has built...". Unlike the
hegemonic organizations of the African one party states and Eastern
European administrations that hosted the exile leaders of Mbeki's
generation, the ANC has to limit any absolutist inclinations it may
have within the boundaries set by liberal democracy. As its own
official programme suggests, "any legal and robust (though broadly
speaking counter-revolutionary) expression of the real contradictions
in society... should be treated as legitimate expressions" (my
emphasis).
Though ANC leaders resist the suggestion that their organisation has
become increasingly oriented to the demands of electoralism and
parliamentary politics - hence the efforts to encourage community
development undertakings by branches - increasingly the behavioural
characteristics of such a formation are evident. They are observable in
the predomination within the party's leadership structures of MP's and
cabinet ministers, in its occupation of the central terrain in the
ideological spectrum of South African politics, in its insistence on
its prerogative as the elected government to make policy by itself
rather than conceding the corporatist claims of its trade union ally,
in its efforts to curtail inner organisational democracy, and finally,
of course, in the increasing tendency for its activist membership to
become preoccupied and animated by the competition of rival factions
for public office.
Factionalism may not be an attractive spectacle but its emergence
within the ANC is an important and, for some observers at least, even
reassuring symptom of South African politicians' assumption of habits
that are quite normal in the public life of a liberal democracy.