In the current epoch, there is no room for political by-standers. As citizens, we urgently need to reconfigure politics in South Africa. We dare remind South Africans that political activism is not a liberation movement exclusive, but a generational necessity summoned by the conditions of that time. The state of the republic calls for the current generation to take its rightful place in the pages of history.
The genesis of RISE Mzansi in 2023 was born of historical necessity and political urgency to reconfigure the zeitgeist. This reconfiguration imperative is a prime reason the upcoming 2024 South African elections are compared to the 1994 national election, which ushered in a new political administration, new representative leadership, and refreshing dispensation. Hence, every one of the 27 million citizens on the voters’ roll must vote on 29 May and be conscientiously mindful of the epochal significance of their decision.
As we mark thirty years into the democratic dispensation, the country's depressing socio-economic conditions require structural and institutional interventions by a generation of men and women willing to do things differently. These are men and women who represent leaders in their own right, forged on principles of selfless service and priding themselves on building a meritocratic public service.
They are men and women dedicated to transforming citizen apathy into passionate community engagement and individual despondency into citizen-centric hopefulness. Fortunately, RISE Mzansi has in its policy arsenal and leadership ammunition the necessary qualities to inspire the millions of South Africans who have been disappointed over the past decade by politics of indecision and policy schizophrenia. This reality is corroborated by the perennial declining figure of registered citizens going out to vote and actively participating in civic life.
One of the distinct features of this 2024 election is the number of parties that will be on the ballot paper. Two schools of thought seem to justify this reality. The first suggests that the voter is wiser and South Africans are taking advantage of the democratic process’s evolution.
The second cautions against this evolution by raising concerns that more citizens are finding themselves alienated from democracy. It says that structural socio-economic issues, rooted in inequality, have denied South Africans the experience of belonging and that we are witnessing people finding solace in alienated pockets of representation. Traditional parties which dominated the political space have become less appealing and have alienated millions of South Africans into the wilderness. The birth of RISE Mzansi is a response to this identity disjuncture.