United Front takes baby steps to redefine SA politics
Since its December 2013 special national congress' call for trade union federation Cosatu to sever its ties with the ANC, the decisions of the National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa (Numsa) have received poor analysis. Most misrepresented has been the union's resolution forNumsa to lead in the establishment of a United Front.
Despite numerous statements that explained that the envisaged front was a movement whose primary objective is to strengthen and co-ordinate union and community struggles, commentators and analysts continued to describe the United Front as "a party-in-the-making" for electoral contests in 2016 and 2019.
Unfortunately, it is through these jaundiced eyes that the same commentators have analysed the outcomes of the Preparatory Assembly for the United Front that was held in December last year.
Now that the assembly reiterated the view that the United Front was not an electoral political party but a movement that intends to struggle for a "democratic and egalitarian society", those fixated to the position that the coalition was a party are characterising the whole initiative as riddled with contradictions and united only by antagonism towards to the ruling party.
Days after the assembly, more than one editorial opined that the danger for the front "lies in the fact that the new movement continues to define itself largely in terms of what it is not, rather than what it is" and will therefore disappear into political oblivion like Bantu Holomisa's United Democratic Movement or the Congress of the People (Cope).