The moral vision of the ANC
This week we lodged our list of candidates with the Independent Electoral Commission. These public representatives are called upon to serve the people of our country diligently and with dignity.
We have emphasised that the post-2009 election administration will improve on the work of previous ones in terms of implementation. We have had a highly successful 15 years of governance. Our government has made much progress in the provision of housing, water and electricity to millions of homes. Our economy has grown. More jobs have been created during this period than in any other time in our history and we have deepened our democracy. We have extended social protection to millions of South Africans through the provision of social grants. More still needs to be done, and working together, we can do more.
One of the areas that we will focus on more strongly is nation building. The ANC will work to promote the vision of a united South African nation, sharing common positive values, as enshrined in our Constitution.
Our Constitution, inspired by the vision of the Freedom Charter, unites a nation of many languages and significant cultural, religious and socio-economic diversity.
We have noticed the current debate around moral values and the claims by some political parties to be more morally upright than others. The ANC's moral vision and morality dates back many decades and remains as relevant now as it was in 1912. The Rev ZR Mahabane, the third President of the ANC, articulated what became the ANC's moral vision in his speech entitled "We are not political children" in 1912. He observed that African people were landless, voteless, homeless, and hopeless and had been deprived of their humanity and the right to decide their future. He maintained that in such circumstances the ANC had to strive to restore the humanity (Ubuntu/Botho) of the African people as a prerequisite for the restoration of the humanity of the people of South Africa as a whole.