Whether the "wily Zulu" Jacob Zuma survives personally or not, the political regime around him certainly will not. Before its five-year term of office is completed, it will either have changed its whole character, or just crumbled.
The evidence for this forecast has already stacked up. For South Africans (many whites among them) to sit back now with a whiskey, debate whether the ANC (2008 version) can settle down to running the country by making the odd adjustment here and there, is talking to the fairies. Not a month passes now without the ANC leadership dragging the government down notch by notch. Give South Africa two or three more years of this kind of "governance," and it will formally rank as one of Africa's "failed" states. A preliminary study of "failed" government departments is an exercise in itself.
At the heart of the matter, is a witches' brew of politicians, trade unionists, testosterone driven youth, the would-be upwardly mobile and miscellaneous others. Apart from a leftward tilt, and an agreed pursuit of power and greed, the ANC 2008 has no cause in common, no shared chemistry, no "colonialism" to take apartheid's place. It's every man for himself. The ANC (1912-2008) at least had a legend - not a continuous, lofty one, but a powerful legend nevertheless.
White rule, magnified by apartheid, was the source of this legend; and in his post-1994 arrogance Thabo Mbeki engaged in a running war with the labour movement, creating hostilities that should never have been allowed to deteriorate as far as they did. Presently, these hostilities are being kept active by racist leaders whose mission is to keep "colonialism" alive, long after only a few withered bones litter the old battle terrains.
The ANC 2008 has nothing remotely like this legend in prospect. Its supporters include a mishmash who offer no cause for pride. No doubt the majority of ordinary ANC members are ordinary decent folk who would like to belong to a party of which they can feel proud; but from one end of Africa to the other, with the odd exception, thuggish leaders are the tone-setters. Here it might be noted Gareth van Onselen's (May 28) reference to the "garbage" spewed out by the ANCYL and the menacing MK (ANC) Military Veterans' Association.
On balance, although the ANCYL has been Zuma's most vocal supporter, the street muscle has come from Cosatu, a trade union federation with 21 affiliated unions and a combined membership of about 1.95 million. Obviously, Cosatu leaders cannot represent these members at general elections, such as the one on April 22, because it is not their job to function as a political party - and anyway they do not have a clue whether the average unionist backs, the ANC, or Cope, or any of the other 24 parties that contested the elections. Yet they proceed with utter self-confidence as if they had a mandate to support Zuma - an elected leader for whom both Cosatu and the SACP on occasion have shown open contempt.