Trevor Manuel is telling South Africans not to vote ANC
Trevor Manuel's latest attack on the ANC government's service delivery record is the fourth such incident in three months. Trevor Manuel is at war with the ANC. He has described it as unaccountable, racist, corrupt, and a party that has failed to deliver to the poor. But if Trevor Manuel, as a member of the senior leadership of the ANC, has no confidence in his party's ability to govern, there is no reason why voters should. In short, Trevor Manuel has told South Africans why they should not vote for the ANC.
Consider the string of attacks Mr Manuel has recently launched on his own party's record:
This week, on the issue of delivery, he said: "We must accept that, despite the adequate allocation of funding, we fail to deliver quality services, especially to the poor." And: "We perform poorly, even by our own standards."
On the subject of poverty alleviation, he said on 15 January this year: "We have not been overly successful in eradicating the unfreedoms that [Nobel prize winning economist Amartya] Sen refers to. The effect of these failures is that ... we overly rely on cash grants to poor households. This is better than nothing, but it ... [does not] enable poor households to get out of poverty."
On the ANC government's record on openness, he also said on 15 January: "The [government] bureaucracy resists giving information to people, especially when communities have little voice and are marginalized."