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(en) South Africa, An anarchist Journal Zabalaza: #7 - AFTER 10 YEARS OF GEAR: COSATU, THE ZUMA TRIAL AND THE DEAD END OF ALLIANCE POLITICS by Lucien van der Walt
Date
Sun, 31 Dec 2006 13:40:02 +0200
South Africa’s transition, as we stated in Workers Solidarity in 1998, went sour
a long time ago. Overthrowing apartheid was a tremendous victory, but not
enough. It was soon overshadowed by the ANC’s neo-liberal policies, which built
on those adopted in the last years of the apartheid regime.
LOST IN TRANSIT
As an increasingly multiracial ruling class consolidated its position, the
working class retreated. This retreat was - and remains - fundamentally a
question of politics and strategy: COSATU and the SACP had no idea how to deal
with the new situation. Having spent years believing the ANC would, like Moses,
lead the people out of bondage in Egypt, they now found themselves in a strange
new country. Apartheid was gone, but slavery was not. The supposed Moses now
looked a lot like Pharaoh, but COSATU and the SACP remained part of the
Tripartite Alliance.
ALL GEARed UP
The miserable conditions in the townships continued, mass unemployment - which
started in the 1970s - continued to grow, and neo-liberalism accelerated. 30% of
TELKOM was privatised in 1996 and a further 20% was listed in 2003, and ESKOM
and the SA Post Office were commercialised. While the GATT (now the World Trade
Organisation) required tariff protection on telecommunications to fall to 20%,
the government set itself the target of zero protection, and also opened up
other controls over trade and capital movements. These approaches were
consolidated in the 1996 Growth, Employment and Redistribution Strategy (GEAR),
but did not start with it.
The unproductive financial sector shot up to 20% of the entire SA economy,
although it employed only 1% of the workforce, while manufacturing and mining
shrunk, with perhaps 1 million jobs lost in these sectors plus agriculture. The
electricity and water grid was expanded, but with cost recovery applied, 10
million people suffered water cut-offs and 5 million were evicted.
SAVING THE ANC’S SOUL
In this situation, COSATU and the SACP chose to try and save the unhappy
marriage with the ANC. Afraid of being isolated from the seats of the mighty,
flattered by pats on the head by ANC leaders, tempted by job offers, and unable
to break with an almost religious loyalty to the ANC colours - and a
well-established tendency to uncritically worship ANC leaders - union and Party
policy makers spent fruitless years trying to redeem the ANC.
Reinforcing this approach was the longstanding, and seriously flawed, view that
South Africa must have a two-stage “revolution”: a “national democratic stage,”
led by the ANC, to end racism, followed by a “socialist stage,” in a vague future.
“Intervening” in the ANC, “contesting” it, “saving” its soul: these were the
terms used to justify this approach. The fact that the ANC was - and always had
been - a capitalist party that aimed to open up, as Nelson Mandela stated back
in 1956, “fresh fields for the development of a prosperous non-European
bourgeois class,” was ignored.
BEE-llionaires
The fact that the major debate within the ruling ANC after 1994 was on how to
link neo-liberalism to Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) - the deliberate
creation of the “non-European bourgeois class” - was ignored. The fact that the
ANC had struck a deal with the apartheid-era ruling class, and had now joined
it, was ignored.
COSATU and SACP positions moved from the naïve (the idea that the ANC would drop
neo-liberalism if only it would let COSATU provide good advice) to the paranoid
(there was a conspiracy against “transformation”). For organisations that spoke
in the language of class struggle, there was nothing in the way of a class
analysis of the realities of the situation.
COSATU and the Party were ignored by the ANC, and periodically insulted - except
at election times, when their financial support and influence were eagerly
sought. After elections, of course, it was business as usual, with South
Africa’s particularly vile brand of capitalism flourishing. By 2006, the economy
was booming, reaching 5% growth, the number of families with more than $30
million each shot up four times, but the income of the bottom 40% of the
population fell by nearly half.
ZUMA AND COSATU
This situation has played out in the Jacob Zuma controversy. Zuma, a leading ANC
member, deputy president of South Africa, and head of the State-sponsored “Moral
Regeneration Campaign,” was found to have been involved in corruption around the
arms deal. His associate, Durban businessman Shabir Shaik, was found guilty in
2005, and Zuma himself now faces charges.
Mbeki, not a man to tolerate rivals in the ANC, used the opportunity to oust
Zuma from office. Another bombshell followed, when Zuma was accused of raping a
close family friend who, it transpired, was HIV-positive.
Now, it was fairly clear that corruption was not the main factor in Zuma’s
dismissal. His replacement in office, Phumzile Mlambo-Nguka, was almost
immediately involved in a scandal. She used a Falcon 900 executive jet of the SA
Air Force to take her husband, children and friends on a holiday to the United
Arab Emirates. It was also clear that Mbeki, an autocrat of the first water, was
more than happy to use the judiciary and the State intelligence services to
resolve internal disputes in the ANC.
COSATU’S POSITION
There was also nothing surprising in the fact that Zuma used every trick in the
book to whip up support at the rape trial, ranging from crude Zulu nationalist
appeals to a legal team that effectively put his accuser on trial. Mobilisations
outside the courthouse drew in a wide range of groups, with many reactionary
features, ranging from slogans like “Burn the Bitch” to placards saying “No
Woman for President.”
A whole cult was built up around Zuma. The Friends of Jacob Zuma stated: “We,
the people, will ensure that this man of honour, who dedicated his life to
liberating us, will finally have the right to defend himself.” One protestor
carried a cross, with a Zuma picture, claiming that this “man of honour” was
being persecuted “just like” another “man of honour,” Jesus Christ. This seems
ridiculous, but it was typical of the Zuma mobilisations.
What was most surprising - at least at first glance - was COSATU’s almost
uncritical support for Zuma during 2005 and 2006. The SACP was a bit more
divided, but its Youth League was in the forefront of the Zuma mobilisation and
the Friends of Jacob Zuma organisation.
STRANGE FRUIT
This seems strange at first, but it is the logical outcome of the dead end in
which COSATU and the SACP find themselves after ten years of “engaging” the ANC,
after ten years of futile complaints about GEAR, after ten years of COSATU
policy documents gathering dust at Shell House.
Unable to break with the ANC, and unable to change it, the union and the Party
placed their hopes in Zuma. Zuma had never uttered a word against GEAR, against
capitalism or against neo-liberalism but he had one good point: he was not
Mbeki, and it was hoped that he might be a new Moses to lead the people. After
all, according to COSATU and SACP thinking, there must always be a great leader:
the masses need to be led.
The “support for Cde Jacob Zuma,” Blade Nzimande of the SACP recently told the
NUM, exposed popular opposition to the crises of corruption, factionalism and
personal careerism” in the ANC, “crises” that were “inherent in trying to build
a leading cadre based on capitalist values and the symbiotic relationship
between the leading echelons of the state and emerging black capital.” The Party
Youth League grandly stated that “Our defence and support for Jacob Zuma is the
defence of the constitution.”
Meanwhile, speaking of the upcoming Zuma corruption trial, Zweli Vavi of COSATU
called for Zuma to be reinstated in his positions: “”We will ensure that
whenever comrade Zuma appears in court, our people will demonstrate en-masse.”
EXODUS WITHOUT A MAP
Nothing can better express the bankruptcy of the political outlook of COSATU and
the SACP than these positions. Zuma is no different to Mbeki: another rich
politician, another false Messiah who misleads the working class, another ANC
scoundrel who would implement GEAR as much as Mbeki. In no way whatsoever would
he break with the ANC policy of developing “a leading cadre based on capitalist
values” and a “symbiotic relationship between the leading echelons of the state
and emerging black capital.”
However, there is nothing surprising about the COSATU and SACP position. Bound
to the ANC by fear, flattery and a failed strategy - the two-stage theory that
the ANC will open the door to socialism - and blinded by its traditional
devotion to Congress and its leaders, the two organisations remain in a dead
end. The fact that many of their leaders are only too eager to join the ANC
leadership at the capitalist feast does not help either. In this situation,
support for Zuma is certainly tragic but almost inevitable.
Support for Zuma allows the ANC to remain sacred and untouchable, and the
politics of relying on a saviour untouched. A hard look at the nature of the
transition can be avoided, and a serious struggle against capitalism postponed,
yet again. All problems could be blamed on Mbeki and his faction: Zuma has been
discovered to represent the shining soul of the ANC; Mbeki became Satan
overnight. In return for COSATU and SACP backing in the Alliance and internal
ANC battles, the structures hoped Zuma might - just might - be nicer than Mbeki
and might - just might - listen to the working class for a while.
This is what the pro-Zuma mobilisations by working class organisations mean. The
outcome of a disastrous politics, they don’t take the working class out of the
dead end that loyalty to the ANC involves. The only way out is a break with the
ANC, not a false choice between Mbeki and Zuma. The ANC is not the solution: it
is a large part of the problem faced by the workers and the poor.
===============================================================
web site link: http://www.zabalaza.net/index02.htm
pdf of #7 - http://www.zabalaza.net/pdfs/sapams/zab07.pdf
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