/ 13 October 2022

ANC branches nowhere near ready for elective conference

Anc Members Celebrate The 107th Anniversarry, In Inanda Photo Delwyn Verasamy
With only 772 of the 3 979 branches having run successful branch general meetings, the ANC conference risks not convening. Photo: Delwyn Verasamy

With only 11 days until the deadline for ANC branches to nominate candidates for the top positions in the party, only a fraction of the party’s 3 979 branches have run successful meetings. 

The branches must also nominate candidates for the national executive committee (NEC), which will be decided at the party’s conference in  December. 

This was announced during  a special NEC meeting on Wednesday afternoon. 

In the presentation seen by the Mail & Guardian, only 772 branches have run successful branch general meetings, with 3 207 still outstanding as of 9 October. Across the country 2 327 branches have convened branch general meetings with 1 555 disqualified. 

According to ANC insiders, provincial chairs and secretaries argued bitterly during the NEC meeting and called for an investigation into why branches were failing to qualify. 

One NEC member who spoke to the M&G said some party leaders argued that the electoral committee headed by former president Kgalema Motlanthe needed to take over the process of running branch general meetings. But this was thwarted by the organising committee and NEC members. 

The insider added that the process had reached a crisis. They said that ANC general manager Fébé Potgieter-Gqubule has been asked to establish a rapid response team to assist branches to understand the system.  

“When the NEC said we must investigate because there is a trend that the Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal are targeted by the reduction of their numbers while Limpopo branches are increased there was a push back.”

The insider said there were people who wanted to manipulate the process to sideline the small provinces. 

“Northern Cape is not a factor as long as they manage the province so that 70% that meets the threshold is not met by Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal for them to have an upper hand,” the NEC member said. 

Another NEC member added that there was a call for a full report to be tabled next week at another special meeting. 

“There must be an explanation on where the branches are and why they keep being disqualified. That branches dont quorate is a big problem. Gauteng argued that we must increase the number of manual scanning from 10% to 20% of branches. Some argued that if you do that, that is a recipe for disaster because it opens up manipulation and branches can harvest IDs. The conference is at risk of not sitting. That is why some are saying it must sit within the 70% threshold.” 

More than two years ago, the ANC moved from a manual to a digital system of monitoring branch meetings to do away with gatekeeping and manipulation of processes. 

Another NEC member and provincial leader added that  Limpopo’s Reuben Madadzhe was the only provincial secretary who did not motivate for the process to be investigated. 

“There was also an agreement that secretaries must be reinstated into the system. Initially they had been left out and the system centralised to Luthuli House. Branch secretaries were in the dark on which branches qualified and even if Luthuli House tampers with the system they would not know.”

In a recent memo to provincial and regional secretaries extending the cut-off date for branch general meetings from 2 October to 25 October, acting secretary general Paul Mashatile said branches that were disqualified would be able to rerun their meetings. 

Mashatile said a meeting of the secretariat highlighted a number of problems affecting branch meetings, including load-shedding, industrial action by ANC staff members, a high percentage of newly elected branch secretaries not familiar with the membership system, and the need to upgrade scanner software.

ANC branches have in the past raised concern about the scanner software, the QR codes. The party’s digital system is used to verify a member’s ID and their ANC membership. It also monitors whether branches have a quorum to hold meetings. This system is monitored and run at the ANC’s headquarters at Luthuli House. 

During a special provincial executive committee on Tuesday, Eastern Cape chairperson Oscar Mabuyane said the biggest challenge so far is branch general meetings being delayed, caused mainly by the manner of administering the new system.  

“The centralisation for the issuing of QR codes is proving to be problematic as there is little capacity to handle the work by the head office, which is further compounded by the nonpayment of ANC staff at Luthuli House. The NEC should look into that matter so that branches can complete their nominations in a manner that is not hampered,” he said. 

Many ANC employees have not been paid. They embarked on a go-slow more than three weeks ago. This has affected the system that depends on Luthuli House staff ensuring that branch general meetings are properly convened and reach quorum.

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