A special conference and recalling the President
Recently, I had a very interesting conversation with an ANC “Commissar” as I call him, a seasoned ANC activist and leader, at my local watering hole, an Irish Pub in the north of Johannesburg, which is a hive of intellectual and entrepreneurial energy and activity, with its plethora of well established and uber ambitious black middle-class professionals and businesspeople.
As we discussed the recent electoral outcomes and what it means for the ANC and the country going forward, whilst enjoying the establishment’s popular double Klippies and Coke special (for him) and something boringly non-alcoholic for me as a newly recruited and reformed teetotaller, he made some very startling, jarring, and alarming comments and suggestions, which left me with much food for thought and scope for interrogation.
Firstly, he made the point that ANC presidents in their second term have faced very serious internal organisational challenges within the post-94 dispensation, often becoming lame duck presidents for large swathes of their second term, as people realign and seek to position themselves for the period beyond the term of the incumbent president.
He alluded to the concept of diminishing marginal returns (marginal utility) and stated that within the context of the government of national unity, these diminishing returns for both the ANC and its current leader are more drastic in effect and impact and as such should necessitate that the organisation call a special national conference to reflect, analyse and potentially even act (more on that later).
In his view, given the prevailing conditions and political context, it would be a fatal flaw for the ANC to wait until 2027 before calling a national conference, especially with local government elections coming up in 2026, without having taken the time to collectively analyse where it finds itself as a revolutionary political formation, reflect on its current state, nature and characteristics and of course project its future perspective for the country, as a strategic centre and leader of society.