A friend messaged me on Monday with, "What happens now?" I didn't need to ask what she meant. More or less everyone with an interest in South Africa's future is trying to make sense of what happened at the recent ANC Youth League conference from which its leader, Julius Malema, emerged a very powerful man with a very dangerous agenda.
Malema is powerful for three reasons. First, he has the demagogue's ability to stoke smoldering resentment into flame. Second, he has a tyrant's implacability, confident in the knowledge that his opponents don't have his stomach for a fight and, sooner or later, will sue for peace on his terms. Third, and most importantly, he is likely to have a large enough bloc of votes on the floor of the ANC's elective conference in Manguang next December to significantly influence, or even control, its outcome.
His agenda is dangerous because it is ruinous. He seeks to nationalise mines and banks, expropriate land without compensation and, in his fantastical scheme of things, transfer the ‘illicit' wealth of white South Africa into the hands of an impoverished black underclass, doubtless earning himself and his cronies a brokerage fee along the way (Ranger Rovers don't come cheap).
Of course as history everywhere shows, the actual outcome of such an agenda would be the further impoverishment of the poor; a kleptocracy run by a thuggish elite increasingly detached from reality. The better-off, as always, would simply leave.
So, what is to be done?
It is essential to grasp that Malema is a product both of the ANC's failure since 1994 to achieve an environment for rapid economic and job growth and of its lamentable success since Mafikeng in 1997 at leveraging South Africa's legacy of racial division in the cause of what it calls transformation, a term that refers in theory to the noble aim of empowering those oppressed by apartheid but in practice is a kind of legalized looting of the state and, with its anxious acquiescence, of business by a politically connected elite.