The Coronavirus Pandemic – Decisive leadership needed on all social fronts
20 March 2020
On Sunday, 15 March 2020 President Cyril Ramaphosa, in a wide-ranging and comprehensive address to the nation, announced a national state of disaster in the face of the coronavirus pandemic. Ramaphosa’s address was widely, and correctly, commended across most of the social and political spectrum. It has once more underlined that, at its best (and it has not always been remotely at its best), a collective national-democratic leadership spearheaded by the ANC-led movement is the only force capable of providing cohesive, nation-building mobilisation in the complex and often fractious, post-apartheid reality of South Africa.
We will, of course, not escape the pandemic. It is still too early to assess just how effective the measures announced will be in helping to moderate the dire impact. But without a state-led, common effort within the context of these emergency measures the situation would become immeasurably more difficult.
Nation-building mobilisation based on a shared sense of solidarity, of an injury to one is an injury to all, is essential. It is needed not just to confront the coronavirus pandemic but our country’s numerous and interrelated developmental challenges – inequality, unemployment, poverty and the scourge of crime and gendered violence.
Imagine, for a moment, if this pandemic had struck South Africa under a President John Steenhuisen, or a President Helen Zille. Both might well be relatively competent centre-right politicians. But they would simply not have the social stature or breadth of authority or broad movement and solidaristic history behind them to harness the country behind the tough but decisive measures now required. (Even the most ardent DA supporters know this in their hearts.)