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South Africa to hold elections in May 2019

By AFP
07 November 2018   |   3:30 pm
South Africans will head to polls in May 2019, officials said Wednesday, with President Cyril Ramaphosa and the ruling ANC party seeking to reverse growing voter discontent over the weak economy.

South-Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa (R) and Police minister Bheki Cele inspect an honour guard of South African Police Services (SAPS) members, as they came to attend the launch of the new SAPS Anti Gang Unit on November 2, 2018 in the Cape Town gang-ridden suburb of Hanover Park. (Photo by Rodger BOSCH / AFP)

South Africans will head to polls in May 2019, officials said Wednesday, with President Cyril Ramaphosa and the ruling ANC party seeking to reverse growing voter discontent over the weak economy.

The ANC, which has held power since the end of apartheid in 1994, recorded its worst electoral performance in local polls in 2016 before it replaced scandal-tainted Jacob Zuma with Ramaphosa earlier this year.

The main opposition Democratic Alliance (DA) and radical Economic Freedom Fighters parties will hope to make gains in the election as unemployment hits record highs of near 28 percent and racial inequalities remain dire.

“The commission held an engagement with the president… and subsequent to that the president then announced his intention to have elections before the end of May,” Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) chairman Glen Mashinini told reporters.

“We normally do it on a public holiday on a Wednesday. It will be one of those Wednesdays within the month of May after the 7th of May.”

Ramaphosa, a former trade unionist and wealthy businessman, is expected to announce the election date in February.

At the last national elections, held in 2014, the African National Congress (ANC) won 62 percent of the vote, the DA won 22 percent and EFF took six percent.

In local elections in 2016, ANC support fell to 53 percent — pointing to a fiercely contested vote next year.

An October poll by Afrobarometer suggested 48 percent of South Africans would vote for the ANC, with the DA and EFF tied on 11 percent each.

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