In the early days of the ANC breakaway the consensus of the South African commentariat was that the ruling party had little to fear. The prominent political analyst Steven Friedman was quoted by Sapa on October 15 as saying "I'm quite sceptical that this party is really going to get the kind of attraction to give anyone in the ANC sleepless nights."
There are reports emerging that the ruling party has taken fright at the challenge posed by the Congress of the People (COPE). Friedman now says the ANC is panicking. Responding to a report that the ANC National Working Committee had decided to bring the election date forward by a month he stated, "I do not have polls to back me up" he told Business Day earlier this week, "but what I am hearing is that people at Luthuli House are terrified of COPE."
The breakaway has not had an easy time of it in the national press recently, going through a number of names before settling on COPE (see logo). But, despite those difficulties, Mbhazima Shilowa and Terror Lekota have generally managed to project an image of serious-mindedness even as the ANC leadership has been running around like a five-headed chicken.
Earlier this week Shilowa reportedly told the foreign media that COPE had registered 65,000 members in the Free State and 50,000 in the Eastern Cape. 80% of ANC branches in the former Transkei had also apparently defected to the new organisation. "Similar patterns are being reported by all co-ordinators across the length and breadth of our country," he said.
If these figures are correct it would mean that the ruling party is haemorrhaging supporters and branches to the new party. (ANC membership peaked at 621,237 before the organisation's 52nd national conference in Polokwane last year.) This would give the ANC good reason to panic, and this week there have been a number of other signs that it is beginning to do so.
The ANC has brought a great deal of negative publicity down upon itself by failing to rein in its supporters, who have disrupted COPE meetings and threatened its leadership. But its national leadership is also responding to the challenge by indulging in spoiling tactics, albeit of a different type.