Statement on the occasion of ANCWL Ordinary National Executive Committee Meeting
29 July 2024
The African National Congress Women's League convened its ordinary National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting on 27-28 July 2024 at Hotel Sky in Sandton, Johannesburg. This NEC is the first to be convened following the electoral loss of an outright majority by the African National Congress. Although the decline in electoral support does not signal a defeat to the liberation project, it does however mark a setback to our pursuit of the National Democratic Revolution.
As the largest organisation of South African women, and a league of a liberation movement, we have a revolutionary obligation to assess the outcomes and aftermath of the National and Provincial Elections. The NEC meeting examined the political landscape that led to us receiving only forty percent (40%) Of electoral support in the recent elections. The NEC meeting acknowledged that the loss of an outright majority by the ANC in elections risks the reversal gain the ANC-led government has made in the past 30 years as it pertains to the emancipation and liberation of women. This may have effect on legislations that will get passed in parliament, as well as policies that may get implemented in different spheres of society as well the representation of women in positions of leadership across all sectors. The ANC is the only political organisation in South Africa that adheres to the principle of gender parity in everything it does.
We also wish to applaud and commend all women who have been elected to serve as Portfolio Committee Chairpersons and Whips in the National Assembly and various legislatures in all nine provinces. The NEC also welcomes and with pride congratulates Justice Mandisa Maya for the appointment at the apex court of our country, the Constitutional Court, as Chief Justice of South Africa. History truly beckoned, and we are very pleased to witness the appointment of Justice Maya as the black woman to be appointed Chief Justice of the Constitutional Court.
Justice Maya is no stranger to such stellar achievements, having been the first black woman to serve in the Supreme Court of Appeal, as well as the court's first woman deputy president and first woman president.