The ANC has spared its president Jacob Zuma possible embarrassment by not sending him to address the party’s Limpopo congress, for which some delegates had prepared insulting songs about him, intending to humiliate him publicly, it has been learned.
ANC secretary general Gwede Mantashe said this week that Zuma would not attend the congress. The party would instead send ANC Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe.
ANC members in the province have accused Zuma of orchestrating the recent move to take over the Limpopo provincial government and expose Cassel Mathale as a weak premier and ANC leader on the eve of the provincial conference.
Zuma’s allies want Deputy Arts and Culture Minister Joe Phaahla to replace Mathale as ANC provincial chairperson.
Mathale and his allies, including suspended ANC Youth League president Julius Malema, have made it clear that they want Motlanthe to replace Zuma as ANC president in Mangaung in the Free State next year. Zuma’s allies dominate neighbouring Mpumalanga and are said to be hoping to wrest control of Limpopo from Mathale and Malema, who has been nominated for a position in the provincial executive committee in spite of his suspension.
Provincial ANC insiders said this week that ordinary ANC members were so angry with Zuma that they were already preparing to make him feel unwelcome at the opening of the conference on Saturday. ANC members also blamed Zuma and Mantashe for formulating the charges against Malema to push him out of the party because he held different views on its leadership and policy.
Although party members were planning to boo Zuma and Mantashe, Motlanthe and Human Settlement Minister Tokyo Sexwale are likely to receive a warm welcome.
Sexwale, who is apparently aspiring to be ANC president in 2017, won the hearts of the youth league after he defended Malema at the youth leader’s disciplinary hearings two months ago. The league is expected to push for Sexwale to be elected into the party’s top six in Mangaung next year.
This weekend’s much-anticipated Limpopo conference is expected to set the tone for the ANC succession battle in Mangaung next year. If Mathale were to win, it would boost the youth league’s campaign to replace Mantashe with Sports and Recreation Minister Fikile Mbalula and Zuma with Motlanthe.
Mathale’s supporters are also planning to push for the adoption of a resolution on nationalisation, taken by the recent provincial general council. And they intend to take a resolution that will question the Cabinet’s powers to place provinces under administration without consulting the ANC.
“We must get the ANC national executive committee [NEC] to come and tell us what happened. The reason why we fought with former president Thabo Mbeki was because he shifted power from Luthuli House to Mahlamba Ndlopfu [the state house],” said the ANC provincial leader, who complained that the party was not consulted when the Cabinet decided to put five key departments in Limpopo under administration.
“Polokwane was very clear on these matters. You can have the prerogative as the president but, in exercising your prerogative, you must know that there is the ANC as a centre of power. All ANC deployees, including the president and his Cabinet, must exercise their power in conjunction with the ANC.”
In spite of nomination numbers indicating that Mathale is preferred by the majority of branches in Limpopo to serve as chairperson for a second term, his opponents are adamant that they will defeat him.
They point to anti-corruption marches by trade union federation Cosatu and the South African Communist Party in the past few months and the Cabinet’s decision to put provincial departments under administration as indications that Mathale’s reign in the province is over.
“Things are looking good for us,” said former ANC Youth League provincial chairperson Lehlogonolo Masoga, who is prominent in the anti-Mathale faction. “We are increasing the numbers even after nominations closed. People should understand change is inevitable.”
Former ANC provincial executive committee member Joe Mathebula, who is a candidate for the position of deputy chairperson, said he was confident Phaahla would defeat Mathale.
“There is a strong view that we need more to unify people of the province,” said Mathebula. He said that even if the Mathale group was nominated by the majority of branches, his group had more delegates. “The branch nomination is not reflective of the number of delegates. It is clear who is going to win,” said Mathebula.
Limpopo ANC spokesperson David Masondo said there would be tight security at the conference, as a number of ministers, premiers and mayors were expected to attend.
The youth league, the ANC Women’s League and the ANC Veterans’ League were expected to send 36 delegates each.
Luthuli House has deployed 15 ANC NEC members to oversee the conference.