PRETORIA, South Africa
South Africans braced Tuesday for a tight general election that may loosen the ruling ANC's 30-year hold on power with many voters fed up with unemployment, crime and corruption.
For a second day, 1.6 million
"special voters" including the elderly, essential workers, police and
prisoners, were allowed to cast their ballots early.
The rest of South Africa's 27million-strong
registered electorate will be called on Wednesday to elect provincial
legislatures and a new national parliament. The latter then chooses the
president.
For the first time since the
advent of democracy, the African National Congress is at risk of losing its
outright majority and could be forced to negotiate a coalition.
"This is certainly South
Africa's most unpredictable election since 1994," political analyst Daniel
Silke said.
"It reflects the
broad-based economic decline that the country has been languishing under now
for the better part of the last decade or so."
Under the leadership of the
late Nelson Mandela, the ANC won freedom for black South Africans after decades
of apartheid. It then helped build a strong democracy and lifted millions out
of poverty by creating a broad social welfare system.
But many in the country of 62
million now blame it for overseeing massive graft and mismanaging the economy.
"I will not vote for ANC
but I don't know who I will vote for," said Nomsa Cele, 55, a hawker
selling hats and jewellery on the quiet beachfront of Durban, the largest city
in the battleground province KwaZulu-Natal, whose streets are plastered with
electoral posters.
In the bustling streets of
Umlazi township, one of the biggest in KwaZulu-Natal, rival tents for the ANC
and the radical left opposition Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) were pitched
outside Umlazi Commercial High School.
Busisiwe Mthethwa told AFP her
ballot was secret but said with a slight smile she would vote for the "red
party", implying she was leaning towards the EFF.
The 62-year-old said she had
not cast her vote in 2019 because "she had lost hope in the ruling party's
corruption tactics" but believed "it's now time to make my vote count
and kick them out."
An Afrobarometer survey last
week showed that unemployment, currently at 32.9 percent, rolling blackouts,
corruption and poverty were the most urgent problems South Africans want to be
addressed.
President Cyril Ramaphosa, who
is seeking a second term, defended his record in a speech to the nation on
Sunday, citing progress in fighting graft and fixing gaps in electricity
production among other successes.
"We have placed South
Africa on a new trajectory of recovery and laid a strong foundation for future
growth," the 71-year-old said.
"We cannot afford to turn
back. There is more work to be done."
He has also promised to usher
in universal credit and push ahead with plans to provide health coverage.
But polls suggest the ANC
could win as little as 40 percent of the vote, down from 57 percent in 2019.
Under South Africa's
post-apartheid constitution, MPs are elected on a party list system, and the
executive president is chosen from among their number by the Cape Town-based
parliament.
If the ANC has fewer than 201
seats, Ramaphosa would have to negotiate with opposition parties and
independent MPs to secure a majority and return to government headquarters in
Pretoria.
It could face stark choices.
On the right, it is beset by the Democratic Alliance (DA), which has vowed to
"Rescue South Africa" by rolling back the ANC's race-based economic
empowerment programmes and to boost growth through privatisation and deregulation.
On the left, it is bleeding
support to former president Jacob Zuma's uMkhonto weSizwe (MK) and Julius
Malema's EFF, which favour radical reforms like land redistribution and the
nationalisation of key economic sectors.
Were the party to come close
to 50 percent however, it could also strike a potentially easier deal with some
of the dozens of smaller groups on the ballot.
"The choosing of its
partners will ultimately set the scene for South Africa's future course,"
said Silke.
"But the ANC will be a
weaker party... And indeed, the future of President Ramaphosa could also very
well be in doubt as a result of a poor ANC performance."
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