There is something in the toxic moral atmosphere that has rolled over South Africa in the past few weeks that is reminiscent of that which prevailed after Thabo Mbeki's ascent to the state presidency in 1999. Even though he was taking over from a living icon, Mbeki was nonetheless seen to embody the promise of a new dawn. His government would be decisive, less tolerant of incompetence than Mandela had been, and finally set about delivering. Political writers and commentators fell over themselves praising Mbeki's brilliance and his statesmanlike demeanour and approach. The columnist Xolela Mangcu wrote that, despite its pedestrian delivery, the serious content of Mbeki's inauguration speech made "tears well up" in his eyes.
Though many chose not to notice it the hostility to dissent which would come to characterise the Mbeki-era was already on very public display. The immediate target of the presidency's wrath was the Democratic Party of Tony Leon (the organisation for which I then worked as a parliamentary researcher.) Leon had been critical - or ultra-critical as legend would have it - of the emerging Mbeki-ite agenda of racialism and centralisation. And once the election was over the ANC unleashed its attack dogs on him.
Despite now being the largest opposition party in parliament the DP was stripped of its place on the Judicial Services Commission and the chairmanship of the Standing Committee on Public Accounts. It was also subjected to a campaign of demonisation which culminated in the labelling, in parliament, of the DP as the political home of "neo-Nazism" and "white fascism." The message was delivered by a former DP MP who had defected to the ANC a short while before (and who was subsequently rewarded with an ambassadorship). I remember thinking then that a ruling clique which thought it could use debased propaganda of that kind against a Jewish South African was really capable of anything.
There are certain obvious parallels between then and now. Once again the media has been overcome by a strange and unnatural sense of optimism - triggered perhaps by Zuma's failure to immediately realise any of their deepest and most inchoate fears.
Once again the columnist Xolela Mangcu was choked by emotion at the inauguration of the new president. In his Weekender column he noted how "A tear came to my eye when Zuma was sworn in." Once again the DA has been excluded from the chairmanship of the Standing Committee on Public Accounts as punishment for its ‘hostile' approach. And once again the ANC's attack dogs have been unleashed on the leader of that party.
There are a number of lessons from that 1999 period, which are applicable to the current situation. The first is that the past conduct of politicians remains relevant to assessing their behaviour, even after they are elected to the highest office in the land. There was nothing in the worst of Mbeki's conduct post 1999 that had not actually been presaged by his actions before then.