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Early municipal results show ANC losing support

By Editor
05 August 2016   |   1:55 am
Results from South Africa’s fiercely contested local elections could deliver a setback to the African National Congress (ANC), with early indications showing the party that ended apartheid losing support.
President Jacob Zuma. PHOTO: AFP

President Jacob Zuma. PHOTO: AFP

Results from South Africa’s fiercely contested local elections could deliver a setback to the African National Congress (ANC), with early indications showing the party that ended apartheid losing support.

With the count well under way yesterday, early results put the ANC ahead nationwide but with its lowest-ever levels of backing.

The main opposition Democratic Alliance (DA) was on course to hold Cape Town and was inching ahead in the capital, Pretoria, and the economic hub, Johannesburg, as well as in the city of Port Elizabeth.

“It looks like the ANC has been reduced and humbled in many ways,” Somadoda Fikeni, a political analyst, told Al Jazeera.

“It looks like the verdict coming from the urban areas is negative in such that many will start blaming the leader of the party (Jacob Zuma) because he has been limping from one particular negative story to the other since December when he fired the finance minister.”

Fikeni explained that there had been debates within the ANC whether to use Zuma as the “face of the party or not”.

“The solid support he got from within party … might not have worked well in urban centres where you have a high concentration of a highly-sophisticated middle class and an organised working class.”

The ANC has won more than 60 per cent of the vote at every election since the country’s first multi-racial vote in 1994 when Nelson Mandela was sworn in as president.

With about half of the vote counted, the ANC had 52 per cent support nationwide, with the DA on 30 per cent and the radical leftist Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) on seven percent, according to official results.

The count is seen as a marker ahead of the next general election due in 2019.

The poll is also a mid-term reflection on the performance of President Zuma, who has been plagued by economic woes and a series of scandals since taking office in 2009.

The ANC has dominated the political landscape since the fall of white-minority rule, but a faltering economy, rampant corruption and soaring unemployment have eaten into the party’s popularity.

A final Ipsos survey earlier this week placed the ANC and DA in a close battle.

“I just voted DA for change,” said Claire King, 30, in Port Elizabeth central business district.

“I just think we now need change in our country. Let’s give the DA a chance and see what happens.”

Both the ANC and DA may be forced to court smaller parties and independent candidates to cobble together outright municipal majorities.

Even if the ANC maintains its hold on local power through party alliances, any overall drop in support would be a loss, said Silke.

Contesting its first local poll after bursting onto the scene in the 2014 general election, the far-left Economic Freedom Fighters (EEF) may find itself playing kingmaker.

The party, which won six per cent of the vote in 2014, advocates land redistribution without compensation and the nationalisation of mines.

A record 26.3 million people registered to choose mayors and other local representatives responsible for hot-button issues including water, sanitation and power supplies.

With most of the result due yesterday, a major collapse of support for the ANC could pile pressure on Zuma, 74, to step down before his second term ends in 2019.

South Africa’s electoral commission said late on Wednesday voting had proceeded smoothly and without major incident.

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