Fractured ANC: The ANC's divisions are hampering service delivery
The ANC is fractured, divided and at war with itself. The result is that it cannot govern. If it cannot govern, it cannot deliver, and the people it claims to represent suffer the consequences of its self-interested infighting.
The latest example is the ugly public spat between National Planning Minister, Trevor Manuel and Cabinet Spokesperson, Jimmy Manyi. But, if one casts the net a little wider, the range of disputes and disagreements in the governing party is far more widespread. This infighting has manifested in three forms: internal political disputes; contested policy and divided public institutions.
As for the organisation itself, it has come to resemble a pack of wolves fighting over a kill:
We have witnessed Trevor Manuel fighting Jimmy Manyi and ANC Secretary-General, Gwede Mantashe rebuking Manuel in turn. We have seen Manuel sparring with his fellow Presidency Minister, Collins Chabane over economic policy - indeed, the entire ANC seems constantly to be at odds with itself over how South Africa's economy should be structured.
Then there are the remnants of the Mbeki / Zuma Polokwane battle: every province in the country is divided or factionalised, to the extent that the North West now has a faction known as ‘The Taliban'. As for the ANC in the Western Cape, it remains unclear who is really in charge down there. It does not seem to be Provincial Chairman, Marius Fransman. Is it his nemesis, Mcebisi Skwatsha? His predecessor, Lynne Brown? Or Cosatu Provincial Secretary, Tony Ehrenreich? It is never clear from one day to the next.