President Mandela’s speech at the ANC
conference in Mafikeng met a predictably shocked response from both the
local and international media. The section attacking the opposition
parties, NGOs and the media for being part of some gigantic
counter-revolutionary conspiracy was justifiably regarded both as
paranoid and menacing to the cause of democracy. (The Helen Suzman
Foundation, together with the South African Institute of Race Relations
and Professor Hermann Giliomee, have been named by the SACP’s Blade
Nzimande as key counter-revolutionary conspirators. This makes it clear
that liberals rather than racists or real reactionaries are the
target.) That said, the significance of the speech was not widely
understood.
For a start the speech was a collective ANC effort and the paranoia it
revealed is typical of the entire political sub-culture inhabited by
ANC activists. In the past this fixation with covert forces has had
real roots, as our articles in this issue about the PAC and Winnie
Madikizela-Mandela’s past both testify.
If the media and the Opposition are counter-revolutionary this implies
that there has been a revolution. If so, what sort of revolution is it?
Visibly, it is not a socialist one, so presumably it has to be a
nationalist revolution, the wholesale replacement of one racial elite
by another. But if that is the case, we cannot possibly have national
reconciliation as well: the two are antithetical. When pressed on this
the ANC leadership retreats and talks not about revolution but about
“transformation”. As David Christianson points out in his article on
the conference, this is an empty catch-all phrase. Such playing with
words tells us mainly about the difficulty that the ANC leadership has
in addressing different audiences.
While addressing party activists the leadership wishes to pretend that
South Africa has had a revolution, even if it is yet unfinished. This
is a make-believe world in which we are also told about the “wonderful
achievements” of the Reconstruction and Development Programme (in
housing? health? education? job creation?) and in which it is seriously
suggested that the crime wave is something got up by critics of the
government for political purposes.
This is all curiously reminiscent of the make-believe world in which
the National Party lived for so long. In this world apartheid was not
only moral but workable, black opinion was becoming increasingly
reconciled to it, and even hostile world opinion would see the error of
its ways in the end. For a long time the NP even believed it could
legislate itself out of the television age.
Living in a make-believe world is obviously dangerous; so why do it?
Partly because it would be nicer if things were the way you pretended,
but far more because the ruling elite is reluctant to tell its
followers the truth. If ANC activists at Mafikeng had been told the
truth — that not only had the party reneged on its old programme but
that most of its current policies had failed too — they would not have
been pleased. Ask Thabo Mbeki: at the 1991 conference he bravely tried
to persuade activists of the folly of continuing with economic
sanctions and was howled down for his efforts.
All politicians fudge when they can. But when a party tries to sell a
make-believe vision of the future , it is much more dangerous. The ANC
is now selling such a vision. In it a revolution is underway in which
the overwhelming weight of non-African capital and non-African
professional, business and managerial expertise can somehow be
side-stepped and discounted. Unlike the NP’s vision, this is realisable
in the long-term, but at a far greater distance than ANC activists
would want to contemplate.
President Robert Mugabe held out much the same vision for Zimbabwe. As
the years went by and the promised future failed to take shape, he was
driven to blame all manner of hidden forces; even Aids, vice-president
Nkomo claims, is a white conspiracy. In the end, as Tony Hawkins
demonstrates in his article, such fantasising has led Mugabe to a
remedy that could ruin the economy.
This journey down a populist blind alley is bound to end in
disappointment and, eventually, unpopularity. Politicians do not embark
on such a journey lightly, but because they are scared of their voters
and because they hope they can get away with it. They cannot. Part of
being a leader should mean explaining uncomfortable truths to those who
follow you. As Mbeki’s 1991 experience shows, the consequences can be
rough.