Trevor Manuel, the Minister in the Presidency, was quite right. South Africa's business leaders, he told the World Economic Forum, have been acting like cowards in failing to provide an effective counter-weight to organized labour and that employers were giving in too readily to workers' wage demands.
Nor are BUSA and the SACCI speaking out loud and clear in support of free speech, individual enterprise, capitalism, market solutions and private ownership. Yet those bedrock principles of democratic society are now under attack every day by the SACP and Cosatu, members of the ANC Alliance, as they jockey for power. When BUSA and the SACCI do make public statements they behave like deer caught in the headlights.
Example: Public Enterprise Minister Barbara Hogan sensibly put under-performing parastatals (Escom, SAA, and SABC come to mind) on notice that they must shape up or be privatized and the proceeds employed more productively. That evoked howls of protest from unions and Alliance members.
ANC Secretary-General Gwede Mantashe then gave Hogan a dressing down and pressed her to retract.
The SA Transport and Allied Workers Union said it was "extremely angered" that she had "exercised such poor political judgment.... She should have kept such thoughts to herself as an ANC deployee ...." !
As for Trevor Manuel, the SACP announced it was "deeply enraged" by his remarks finding them "deeply offensive, insensitive, and against the government's commitment to the creation of decent work as the core pillar of economic policy.... For Minister Manuel and others to try and use the post-Polokwane alliance relations to try and silence working class organization and mobilization is not acceptable. The working class is not for sale at the whims of capitalistic sentiments to try and please imperialism and will stand its ground...".