Solidarity Movement welcomes criticism in US Congress about direction of ANC government
28 September 2023
The Solidarity Movement welcomed a series of sharp statements by the chairman of the Africa subcommittee in the US Congress in Washington DC yesterday. John James, a black Republican from Michigan, said during a public hearing on the relationship between South Africa and the US that under the ANC government, South Africa has fallen into a vicious spiral of corruption, state capture and increasing government dependence, and that the government has moved away from the values proffered by the ANC government in the 1990s.
During a visit to Washington last week, the Solidarity Movement handed several documents to James’ policy chief. These included documents about state capture, the intended expropriation without compensation, centralisation of power, as well as crime figures, including those of farm murders. According to Werner Human, the Solidarity Movement’s head of operations, several of the Movement’s arguments were used by James and his fellow congressmen during yesterday’s hearings. “It is clear to us that a very strong voice against the ANC’s abuse of power is emerging in the US Congress. We welcome it.”
The Solidarity Movement is currently on an extensive visit to the USA during which information about events in South Africa is made available to policy makers, as well as concrete proposals on what the USA can do to help protect the rule of law in South Africa, and what can be done to put a stop to South Africa's increasingly centralist and anti-Western policies. According to Jaco Kleynhans, the Solidarity Movement’s head of international liaison, they have been in constant contact with members of the US Congress about this in recent months, as well as with politicians in several American states.
“We expect that the pressure on the ANC government will increase significantly in the months to come. While yesterday’s hearing in Washington gave us a taste of that, we also expect that politicians in several federal states will soon take a strong stand against the centralisation of power by the ANC, new discrimination against minorities in South Africa, ongoing state capture and corruption by the ANC, the EFF and certain ANC politicians’ racist rhetoric, as well as taking a stand against the government’s pro-China and pro-Russia policy which is increasingly also taking on an anti-Western colour.”