The ANC is Stuck in The Past
The modern party political system, for all its claims at
being the pinnacle of democratic expression in liberal society has nonetheless
produced the contradiction of a state that stands “above and outside of
society” as Hannah Arendt, the esteemed 20th century philosopher so
aptly pointed out.
In South Africa, that point is poignantly illustrated by the
attempts at deep soul searching that has played itself out at the ANC National
Policy Conference in Nasrec over the last week.
The ANC has come face to face with the reality that no
matter how noble an organisation or Party`s intentions are, the exercise of
power and wealth, without the sobering limitations of a deeply democratic
structure, inevitably leads to the development and rise of a political class
that soon alienates the state and the party from the people it once
represented.
At the centre of the malaise which currently drives the
steep descent of the ANC from a once proud and noble liberation movement to an
oligarchic patronage network, sits two critical and historical dead weights.
These are the often used phrase that the ANC is a “broad
church” and the contradictory principle of “democratic centralism”.
These dead weights, which once served as a cover-all to the
inherent contradictions of the movement, now appear as oppressive burdens that
serve only to deepen contradictions and hasten the demise of the ANC`s public
stature.
As a broad church which brought together various strands of
the South African society in opposition to Apartheid, the ANC was spectacularly
successful as a rallying point around which various interest groups could
rally, both in the dark days of Apartheid and post 1994.
Upon its attainment of state power however, the ability to
successfully articulate and deliver practical outcomes to the broad interest
groups which flocked to the ANC post 1994 while still delivering to its key
support base, the poor and marginalised, was severely constrained.
It is largely the economic slowdown and stagnation, together
with the crass mode of accumulation via corrupt and shady deals, which has
exposed the ANC and which has forced it to come face to face with the real
possibility that it could lose power in the next election.
The ANC Policy Conference has tried to grapple with the
multifaceted challenges of a stagnant and recessionary economy, increasingly
brazen attempts to capture the organisation and by extension the government
executive, failure of various levels of government to deliver services spurred
on by patronage networks of state looting and a growing discontented society
which results in both a rise in political protests and the loss of electoral
support.
In doing so, it has maintained the Mantra of both it being a
broad church and operating on the basis of central control of the organisation.
At times, as it denies the existence of factions and insists that it remains a
unitary organisation, it appears as if the organisation is trying to place a
square plug into a round hole.
The upshot of this blind allegiance to outdated mantra`s and
ideological cul de sacs, is that the factions remain active, growing ever more
brazen, and based not around issues, but around individuals and the growth of
personality cults at the expense of political ideals.
The rise of personality cults in the ANC has been a direct
result of the organisations own failure to allow organised factions to
participate in the life of the organisation. The ANC, by its own admission
views itself as a movement, a broad church, but unfortunately as Leonard Gentle
once pointed out; “by definition a movement is heterogeneous, comprising such a
range of experiences and organisational forms that no party or single
organisation can encompass that range”.
Added to the broad nature of the interests represented in
the ANC is the reality that the process of policy development requires
organised articulation. As Hal Draper pointed out; no matter how class neutral
in origin or intention, the needs of society cannot be met without passing
through the political institutions set up by a class-conditioned society, and
it is in the course of being processed through these channels that they are
shaped, sifted, skewed, moulded, modelled and modulated to fit within the
framework established by the ruling interests and ideas. This is how the class
nature of the state and society asserts itself, even without malevolent
purposes and sinister plots”
The ANC is such a political institution and the vacuum that
presents itself by the organisations failure to allow for organised factions to
contest ideas within the party, results not only in policy confusion, it also
ensures that policy is left up to patronage networks organised around
personality.
The ANC in its discussion document of 2012 prescribes that
“Our movement must always be at the centre of civil society groups and social
movements that are genuinely taking up issues affecting the motive force and
give political and ideological leadership …and to embed the organisation in
grassroots "daily struggles for a better life" through
"development activism". Furthermore,, it calls for "the creation
of organs of people's power" as the primary organisational form for
organising community involvement in transformation and development work”
It is perhaps in this formulation that the ANC has not only
failed to muster and maintain broad support but has contrived to subvert the
idea of a broad movement using outdated Stalinist conceptions of democratic
centralism.
An example of a broad movement that was able to attain
political power through the ballot box is Syriza of Greece.
Instead of insisting that movements must conform to the
central authority of the leadership, Syrizia instead “followed the social
movements as it developed and (we) tried to participate in the movement and present
(our) views and at the same time learning from it and following its objective
rhythms.”
Aristides Baltas, one of the founders goes on to quote the
Spanish poet Antonio Machado who captures the essence of the Syriza approach:
“don’t ask what the road is; you make the road while you walk it. “
And this is perhaps the crux of the ANC`s failure. It
purports to be an organisation that listens, that is rooted in communities, yet
in its political structures it imposes ideas rooted in personality and individual
aspiration, rather than being led by active social movements and interest
groups who operate not in the shadows of manufactured narratives, but in the
daylight of public interest.
If the ANC hopes to retain any semblance of its noble
history of a liberation movement, and to overcome the characterisation of a
state above and outside of society, then the need to restructure its
anachronistic ideological organisational structure is an imperative. Sadly, it
may have missed the boat.

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