Statement of the African National Congress following National Working Committee Meeting held on the 28th July 2014
Since the 2014 Elections, the African National Congress has witnessed a massive change in Parliamentary politics. This change has been in both form and content and reflects the reconfiguration of the political forces in society. We are seeing two streams of politics; both characterised by religious opposition to any proposal made by the governing party, the African National Congress.
Whether the proposal makes sense or not, both the DA and the EFF have taken a position of adamant and dogmatic opposition to any proposal of the ANC. Indeed their interest is the same - that of delegitimising and weakening the ANC as a liberation movement with the intention to dislodge it.
The posture of the DA is not a new one and has been continuing for a number of years. We have defined it as the DA leading the anti-majoritarian liberal offensive on the ANC as a liberation movement. It uses the theme of values versus numbers instead of values and numbers. It is further underpinned by the strategy of taking every decision of the governing party to litigation with the aim to make it difficult for the legitimate government to govern.
South Africa has also witnessed the entering of a fascist movement into our parliamentary politics. This movement uses uniform to mobilise in the same way that Hitler used brown shirts in 1930s. The worrying factor in this regard is its use of anarchy and destruction as their modus operandi. This anarchy and destruction fits in to the paramilitary content of their strategy, which shows early signs of a rebel movement; designed and calculated to undermine democracy and state institutions.
The view of the National Working Committee is that in countering and dealing with these gutter politics, the ANC should avoid stooping to these low levels set and thus making it difficult for anyone to see the difference between these disruptive tendencies and our programme to create a better life for all. Instead the ANC should focus on the implementation of the programme that we had developed with and sold to the electorate. To this end, the NWC reaffirmed its commitment to the focused implementation of the Manifesto as summarised in the State of the Nation Address.