Cosatu Under Attack from the Nationalists in the ANC

By Richard Pithouse · 4 Jun 2010

A+ A= A-
    Print this page       comments
     
Picture: ILR Cornell
Picture: ILR Cornell

The living party, which ought to make possible the free exchange of ideas which have been elaborated according to the real needs of the mass of the people, has been transformed into a trade union of individual interests. - Frantz Fanon, Tunis, 1961

It’ll be some time before we really know what happened in the National Working Committee (NWC) of the African National Congress (ANC) on Monday. But it seems clear enough that a majority of the NWC supported a proposal to bring disciplinary charges against Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) leader Zwelinzima Vavi. They aim to haul Vavi over the same coals that the party fired up for its recent grilling of Julius Malema. Vavi will, if his enemies get their way, be charged for his criticism of Jacob Zuma and his cabinet for their failure to take decisive action against corrupt ministers like Siphiwe Nyanda. The mere fact that this has been seriously considered by the NWC marks both a spectacular escalation of the tensions within the tripartite alliance and a further step in the seemingly relentless degeneration of the ANC.  

The longstanding tensions in the alliance have ebbed and flowed for years with much of the drama unfolding out of the public eye. But Zuma blazed his path to the Presidency by promising all kinds of things to all kinds of people in the ANC. Expectations were raised on all sides. Once in office Zuma proceeded to hedge his bets and to offer nothing of any consequence to anyone with the result that the tensions within the alliance have sharpened into a very public drama.

The first episode of the latest series in that drama began last year when South African Communist Party (SACP) Deputy Secretary General Jeremy Cronin criticised Malema’s call to nationalise the mines as a public bale-out to indebted private capital.  Malema responded by attacking Cronin as a would be white messiah following which the Young Communist League called Malema a racist and then booed him at the SACP conference the following month. This resulted in an open campaign by the Youth League to replace Gwede Mantashe with Fikile Mbalula as Secretary General of the ANC. In recent days the Communist Party has upped the anti by blaming the Youth League and it’s patently self-serving ‘toilet wars’ for the trouncing that the party received at the hands of the DA in a recent by-election in Cape Town.

The ructions within the alliance are now widely understood as a battle for the soul of the ANC that pits the communists and trade unions on the left against the nationalists on the right.

Mainstream opinion increasingly sees the communists and trade unionists as imperfect but nevertheless rational and concerned with the integrity and well being of society as a whole. Cosatu is often seen as a voice and force for conscience in an ethical landscape rendered increasingly barren by the degeneration of the ANC. Given the federation’s principled position on repression in Swaziland and Zimbabwe, its challenge to Thabo Mbeki’s AIDS denialism, its willingness to speak up against corruption and so on this view certainly carries some weight.  But Cosatu’s uncritical support for Zuma’s campaign for the Presidency, its complicity with the disgraceful nature of the mobilisation around Zuma’s rape trial and the entirely dubious nature of his escape from the corruption charges, along with its failure to act or even speak against the repression of grassroots movements like Abahlali baseMjondolo and the Landless People’s Movement, mean that neither its political nous nor its ethical commitments should be overstated.

The nationalists are generally seen as a corrupt and predatory group that are hostile to democratic values. In Zackie Achmat’s analysis they harbour fascist desires and must be removed from the ANC. In Paul Trewhela’s view they, following Zanu-PF, are ultimately looking to the authoritarian capitalism of China to secure their fortune at the direct expense of the rest of society.

The fracture between the leftists and the nationalists in the alliance may well prove to be the decisive political contradiction in our immediate future. But this possibility should not blind us to the reality of other contradictions or to the fact that as much as the leftists and the nationalists in the alliance may have come to loathe each other they do share a certain political location and certain assumptions.

For a start both groups are largely alienated from the poor. In recent years the SACP has made serious attempts to begin to mobilise the poor in some areas but their successes have been limited and fragmented. The buffoonish publicity stunts of the ANC Youth League in Khayelitsha in recent days indicate that they also have designs on this constituency. But it remains largely true that in terms of building solid organisation the poor are a floating constituency that, outside of a few areas where independent poor people’s movements have become hegemonic, has yet to be decisively aligned to any political grouping.

Moreover both groups are also largely alienated from the ongoing series of popular local rebellions against ANC ward councillors and local party structures and the sustained organisations that have sometimes emerged from these rebellions. These rebellions are not a simple expression of the material crisis of the poor produced by some sort of involuntary spasm of riotous behaviour induced by deprivation. They invariably have a political logic and they need to be understood politically as well as sociologically. In many cases their political logic takes the form of a demand for the subordination of aspects of the local state and local party structures to society. But this popular demand for democratisation is equally alien to the leftists and the nationalists in the alliance who, while adept at contestation in the factory and the boardroom, both see political power as something to be captured through a top down party structure rather than something to be decentralised let alone genuinely democratised.

In some specific respects the language of the left and the nationalists in the ANC is equally pervaded by the organisational assumptions of a clunky Leninism far removed from the living realities of a society in which there is a degree of real popular ferment. The political innovation that we have seen in recent years across Latin America, and in places like Haiti, Greece, or Thailand, often reaches, amidst all sorts of contradictions and limits, towards a genuine commitment to bottom up popular political empowerment. This is entirely absent from the discourse and practices of both the left and their nationalist rivals in the alliance. But there are some seeds of this in the popular rebellions and some thriving shoots in the popular organisation that has emerged out of these rebellions.

The ANC Youth League has a significant degree of power within the party much of which is fuelled by patronage. However it has very little power in society as a whole. But with two million members organised in workplaces across the country Cosatu has enormous potential to exercise real political power within society. If the sleeping giant wakes and seriously orientates its political work to society, including the self organised popular ferment at the base of society, instead of just to the party it will be able to route the nationalists from below by confronting them on the terrain in which they are weak. But if Cosatu keeps the bulk of its political work on the favoured terrain of the nationalists, in the corridors of power where seats at the tables are not earned on the basis of mass support and alliances are greased with patronage and backroom deals, they may well lose.

If they are investing their faith in Zuma to win this battle for them then they have already lost. The best that Zuma will give them is a delay in the overt expression of hostilities won at the expense of another reduction in the right to critique within the alliance. Zuma simply doesn’t have the stomach to confront the nationalists directly and, given his own profound complicity with the politics of patronage, it is clear that he never will.

Dr. Pithouse teaches politics at Rhodes University.

Should you wish to republish this SACSIS article, please attribute the author and cite The South African Civil Society Information Service as its source.

All of SACSIS' originally produced articles, videos, podcasts and transcripts are licensed under a Creative Commons license. For more information about our Copyright Policy, please click here.

To receive an email notification when a new SACSIS article is published, please click here.

For regular and timely updates of new SACSIS articles, you can also follow us on Twitter @SACSIS_News and/or become a SACSIS fan on Facebook.

You can find this page online at http://sacsis.org.za/site/article/490.1.

A+ A= A-
    Print this page       comments
     

Leave A Comment

Posts by unregistered readers are moderated. Posts by registered readers are published immediately. Why wait? Register now or log in!

Comments

Barbara
10 Jun

Great Article

Great article thanks!

Respond to this comment