/ 11 December 2008

Cope wins 10 seats in Western Cape by-elections

The Congress of the People (Cope) won 10 of 27 contested municipal by-elections in the Western Cape, electoral officials said on Thursday.

The by-elections were widely seen as an important gauge of support for Cope, formed after senior leaders defected from the African National Congress (ANC) in protest at the ousting of former president Thabo Mbeki.

Cope candidates stood as independents in Wednesday’s by-elections because the grouping has not yet officially registered as a political party. It plans to launch formally on December 16.

”The ANC won three seats, the (Cope) independents 10, Democratic Alliance nine and the Independent Democrats five of the 27 seats contested in the Western Cape,” said regional electoral officer Courtney Sampson.

The ANC did not contest 12 of the 27 seats in the Western Cape, South Africa’s premier tourist destination. Across the country, a total of 41 by-elections were contested and results were due from other areas.

The ruling ANC’s dominance in South African politics is being challenged by the split and a corruption case hanging over its president, Jacob Zuma.

He has dismissed the breakaway faction as irrelevant, but ANC officials are worried about more defections and have gone to court to prevent the new grouping from using the name Congress of the People.

Cope has vowed to contest a national parliamentary election due in 2009.

Foreign investors are closely watching voting patterns amid fears the ANC will tilt to the left under Zuma.

Since 1994, the ANC has been unable to win an outright majority in the Western Cape where the official opposition Democratic Alliance runs the city of Cape Town. — Reuters