
Will national dialogue fix SA or shield ANC?
With the economy faltering and race tensions rising, dialogue alone won't help if it's used to advance ANC agendas over national interests.
Build One South Africa leader Mmusi Maimane makes a good point when he expresses concern that the coming National Dialogue might be hijacked by the ANC to deal with its own problems and not those of the country as a whole.
We agree with him when he says national dialogues should be held after significant crises – and that we should probably have held one in the wake of the Covid pandemic… presumably to discuss how it had been handled and, even better, to put in places mechanisms to insure that looting of public funds in a dire emergency never happens again.
Maimane is also correct that our country is in trouble. Our economy is slowly imploding and race relations are probably at the lowest point they have been since 1994.
ALSO READ: Is the national dialogue a futile exercise?
The ANC, though, is also in trouble – one only has to look at last year's election results for confirmation of that.
The temptation for the ANC would be to turn the National Dialogue into a platform for pushing more aggressively for transformation and black economic empowerment as a way to head off its more radical rivals like the EFF and uMkhonto weSizwe party.
However, that might save the ANC and wreck the country.
NOW READ: Afrikaners must be part of the national dialogue
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IOL News
an hour ago
- IOL News
Analysts warn DA-led no-confidence vote could topple Ramaphosa
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Mashego said negotiating with the EFF and MK would be difficult, especially because it would require agreement on who would become president if Ramaphosa were removed. 'There is no scenario whereby the MK Party or EFF are going to allow the DA to appoint a president,' he said. 'If the DA also agrees with MK to appoint an MK president, there is no way an MK president will have the DA in Cabinet.' Mashego expressed that the motion is unlikely to happen. 'They might talk about it as a bargaining tool, but they're not going to do it,' he said. 'The recent DA stance is for optics. No South African is looking forward to the national dialogue, so withdrawing from it doesn't change anything.'


Eyewitness News
2 hours ago
- Eyewitness News
'Don't test us': Zille warns Ramaphosa that tabling no-confidence motion in him not an idle threat
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