THE SOUTH AFRICAN OPPOSITION VS THE AFRICAN NATIONAL CONGRESS: WHERE DOES SOUTH AFRICA STAND?
Like never before, our national parliament and other provincial parliaments have recently become a hive of political squirming. Doubtless, this has in part been occasioned by the arrival of the recently formed Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF). The EFF has carefully crafted a strategy to become a distinct force to be reckoned with in parliament so that the people of South Africa - especially the poor and the working class - can see it as an alternative to the ANC. They seem determined to achieve this objective by any means including anarchy. This is by no means surprising if one merely looks at the genesis of this party and the political outlook of many of its leading protagonists.
Astoundingly the Democratic Alliance (DA), not to be outdone, has joined the EFF's anarchist bandwagon. The DA's strategy seems to be rested on the belief that if they were to support the EFF's unruliness, they will at least remain relevant to the black majority and that its status as leader of the opposition in parliament will not be eclipsed by the arrival of the rowdy EFF. This strategy seems like a double-edged sword for the DA because whilst it benefits it in the short term, it will certainly cause it greater harm in the mid to long term.
We say this because the DA is objectively known in South Africa as a well-oiled political opposition machine that has put the ANC on its toes for a long time in parliament. This they have done by successfully challenging the ANC to account on a variety of matters that are of particular concern to the public. The DA's steadfastness on properly researched topics to demand accountability from the ANC in Parliament has been a hallmark of its success in parliamentary opposition benches. This has been silently acknowledged and admired by some even within the ANC itself. This new strategy of working with the EFF in parliament to embarrass the ANC may well obliterate the DA's achievements in parliament.
If one carefully examines the EFF - beside it being an infantile political weapon of mass destruction -it is more like a Freedom Front Plus' (FF+) prototype in terms of its political and ideological extremism. The EFF and FF+ are just two sides of the same coin because their political demands and proposed solutions exclude everybody else in South Africa. Theirs is simply right-wing political syllogism!
If the DA weds itself to the EFF it will eventually become a battered right-wing spouse of the EFF with no liberal credentials to speak of. The DA will find it difficult to explain to its constituency why it has now become a confused right-wing junior partner of the EFF. The only writing on the wall will be that: in their quest and desperation to attack and embarrass the ANC, together with their obsession with the aging President Zuma, the DA lost its political and liberal credentials and credibility at the altar of the EFF's right-wing junta!