By Thursday between one in four and one in five South Africans will have voted for the DA, if the opinion polls are remotely right. The majority of this support will come from be black South Africans - the African, coloured and Indian population who have lived under the ANC and found it wanting.
While we should of course have the humility to wait until the electorate has actually voted, this is the clear direction of travel. Of South Africa's three major cities the DA will retain its Cape Town fortress, Gauteng will be contested and only Durban will remain firmly in the ANC's grasp.
For a party that won 1.7% of the vote twenty years ago, this is an extraordinary achievement. But these simple facts seem to have evaded the grasp of most South African commentators obsessed with Oscar Pistorius or mesmerised by "Commander in Chief" Julius Malema's antics.
What the chattering classes ignore is that the DA's leadership and - more importantly - its support base now truly reflects this "rainbow nation." It is the ANC, which has become the exclusive party.
The DA has become the home and the voice of those who found themselves outside the ANC ring of privilege. These are men and women, who have not benefitted from the ANC's cronyism and ‘deployment.' It is these people, who are outside of this circle of wealth and entitlement, who have been looking in as the orgy of corruption gnaws away at the public purse, who have begun turning to the DA.
It is the teacher who could not bring herself to pay a bribe to her union to win advancement, the Durban shack-dweller under attack from ANC thugs and the Aurora miner, unpaid for 18 months by President Zuma's nephew, while R1 million was donated to the ANC's election chest.