The respective strong showings of the African National Congress and Democratic Alliance in Wednesday’s general election may sharpen the cold war between the two parties in future, independent analyst Aubrey Matshiqi said on Thursday evening.
Provisional results out on Friday morning showed the ANC in the national lead with 69,65%, followed by the DA with 12,71%.
It appeared as if by the end of the vote tallying, the ANC would emerge with an ”absolute majority of the majority” and the DA an ”absolute majority of the minority”, Matshiqi said at the election results centre in Pretoria.
”The question is what that kind of polarisation portends for the future of the country,” he said.
One would have a DA emboldened by its performance, and an ANC so dominant that it was likely to continue ”not listening” to the opposition, Matshiqi said.
”This might sharpen the cold war between the ANC and the DA.”
That could, in turn, lead to a situation where people who voted for the DA because they were unsatisfied with or fearful of the current dispensation would have their perceptions reinforced.
”The challenge here will be for the ANC to show leadership and be the one that enters into a conversation with all South Africans — because there is life after the elections,” Matshiqi said.
Opposition voters appear to have vindicated the DA’s aggressive opposition tactics, he added.
Turning to the performance of the Independent Democrats, which had garnered 1,88% of the votes counted by 8pm, Matshiqi said its showing was not a surprise but nevertheless pleasant. ”It shows that our democracy has the capacity to produce new voices.”
Whether that voice would be effective still remained to be seen, he added.
”I do not believe that the ID is necessarily the answer to people’s requirement for a credible and effective opposition. I don’t see it eclipsing the DA, even in the next election.”
He did not foresee any new political alliances in the short term, saying the ID was likely to seek to maintain its independence despite being courted by several other parties.
Ultimately, Matshiqi said, voters were likely to become dissatisfied with existing opposition parties and shift in coming years more towards the creation of a social sector movement. This was especially likely to happen if the ANC failed to deliver at a level beyond mere policy.
”If I were the DA or any other opposition party, I would not be complacent.”
On KwaZulu-Natal, Matshiqi described the co-operation agreement between the DA and Inkatha Freedom as ”very awkward”, given the differences between their approaches to opposition — the DA being very aggressive and the IFP more co-operative.
Depending on the final results, the IFP would have a difficult choice to make — to join forces with its traditional ally the ANC, or with the DA.
Matshiqi said the IFP, despite having concluded a co-operation agreement with the DA, had not closed the door completely on the ANC.
”It has been an exercise of hedging its bets.”
Should the ANC win the province convincingly, its choice of premier would play a major role in the IFP’s final decision.
Matshiqi said there appeared to be a political crisis among parties to the left of the ANC — including the Azanian People’s Organisation, the Socialist Party of Azania and the Pan Africanist Congress.
The idea has been mooted for these parties to join forces, ”but the problem is that there is no scale so sensitive as to pick up their combined weight”.
Despite high levels of poverty and unemployment and the ANC government’s orthodox economic policies, these leftist parties have failed to strike a chord with ordinary people.
This was most likely because they were perceived as having no practical solutions to the country’s problems, Matshiqi said. – Sapa