Extract of a speech delivered by Dr. Wilmot James, MP at a Public Meeting in the West-Durban Constituency Pinetown Civic, September 13 2010:
We are the only party that offers a philosophically persuasive and clear ideological alternative to the ANC
The word is out. President Jacob Zuma has no backbone. Some people in the African National Congress (ANC) hoped that he would find his backbone in China but there was nothing to find because there was none.
From the opposition benches we have repeatedly listened in disbelief at President Zuma's unconvincing waffle on all manner of issues of great national importance. Recently in Parliament we had to endure an unprincipled, non-analytical and superficial defense of his fudging on the proposal for a media tribunal. As I surveyed the ANC frontbenches the few Ministers who were there visibly cringed in silent embarrassment at his pathetic effort to be presidential.
The benchmark of global opinion The Economist had in its 4 September edition, after giving him a chance to lay some foundations in his first year as President, declared President Zuma to be ‘weak' for failing to stand up to trade union demands for more money we cannot afford to give. His first error of judgment was to be absent during a devastating strike. His second error of judgment was to not face down trade union demands that would add billions to state expenditure we cannot afford, caving in to ‘threats of even bigger strikes.
Overgenerous pay settlements will jeopardise economic recovery. Moreover, the money goes to workers who are already relatively well off, rather than to the 40% of South Africans who are without a job, many of them living in dire poverty' the editorial went. Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan it seems convinced everyone except President Zuma that we needed to achieve an annual growth rate of 7 per cent and low levels of debt to grow sustainably out of the recession and make a dent on reducing poverty levels.