South Africa's Ramaphosa steers ANC into potentially pivotal election
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[May 28, 2024]
By Nellie Peyton and Alexander Winning
JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, who
has staked his reputation on cleaning up the image of the ruling African
National Congress, will lead the party toward its biggest test of the
democratic era when South Africans vote on Wednesday.
Ramaphosa, who helped found the country's biggest mining union and later
became one of its wealthiest businessmen, took on the presidency in 2018
and survived a misconduct scandal to be re-elected to the ANC's helm in
2022.
He has struggled to lift economic growth, make a dent in high
unemployment with a third of South Africans jobless, or end crippling
power cuts - all of which voters are expected to punish the ANC for at
the ballot box on May 29.
If the party loses its majority for the first time in 30 years, as
opinion polls predict, some political analysts say 71-year-old Ramaphosa
will be unlikely to see out a second term.
Ramaphosa was the ANC's lead negotiator during talks that led to a
peaceful end to apartheid, which enabled Nelson Mandela to become South
Africa's first Black president after 1994's historic all-race vote.
He also played an important role in the drafting of South Africa's
progressive constitution.
Despite his evident gifts, Ramaphosa gave up politics in 1996 and
entered business, as Mandela's newly elected ANC sought to dilute the
dominance of the white minority in the boardrooms of the new South
Africa.
Some say he was pushed by Mandela's protégé and eventual successor,
former President Thabo Mbeki. Ramaphosa withdrew from politics under
Mbeki and set up an investment vehicle called Shanduka - which means
"change" in the language of his Venda people.
Shanduka grew into one of the biggest Black-owned investment vehicles in
South Africa. Ramaphosa was one of the main beneficiaries of the ANC's
policy of Black Economic Empowerment, which was meant to reduce
inequality but which critics say led to people with ANC connections
acquiring assets at knock-down prices.
SILVER-TONGUED NEGOTIATOR
The son of a retired policeman, Ramaphosa was a thorn in the side of
white mine bosses in the 1980s, leading the National Union of
Mineworkers (NUM) that he co-founded in one of the largest strikes in
the country's history.
He left the NUM in 1991 and was elected secretary-general of the ANC, in
charge of the day-to-day running of the party, a year after it was
unbanned by the apartheid government.
Ramaphosa's negotiating skills at constitutional talks in the early
1990s won him grudging respect from South Africa's last white president,
F.W. de Klerk, who said Ramaphosa's "silver tongue and honeyed phrases
lulled potential victims while his arguments relentlessly tightened
around them".
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South African President Cyril Ramaphosa speaks at an election
rally in Chatsworth, South Africa, May 18, 2024. REUTERS/Rogan
Ward/File Photo
Ramaphosa started winding down his business interests in 2012, when
he became the ANC's No. 2 official under former President Jacob Zuma.
He replaced Zuma as ANC leader in 2017, vowing to rid the ruling
party of graft and revitalize the economy.
But just as he was about to start campaigning for his second term as
party chief, he faced calls to quit after an advisory panel found
preliminary evidence that he may have violated the constitution over
a large amount of cash found hidden in furniture at his game farm.
He has denied wrongdoing and was not charged with any crimes but his
reputation took a hit from the incident dubbed "Farmgate".
CHAMPION OF GLOBAL SOUTH
Ramaphosa has been criticized for appearing to prevaricate on
crucial reforms to avoid rifts within his party - a far cry from the
decisiveness he showed as a union leader in the 1980s.
Policy changes on energy security, jobs and the green energy
transition stumbled on internal party divisions, and several
committees he created have only dragged out these disagreements.
But his supporters applaud his ability to preserve consensus and say
he has made important achievements advancing South Africa's
reputation as a champion of the so-called "Global South", shorthand
for some low- and middle-income countries including India.
During the COVID-19 pandemic Ramaphosa was one of the most prominent
voices globally calling for fairer distribution of vaccines.
More recently South Africa filed a genocide case against Israel at
the International Court of Justice, leading judges to rule last week
that Israel must halt its military assault on the Gaza city of
Rafah. Israel has vehemently rejected the allegations.
Ramaphosa has campaigned on the ANC's successes over the last 30
years, but critics say he has offered little in the way of new
solutions to South Africa's biggest challenges, including high crime
and stark inequality.
At the ANC's final campaign rally before the election, he promised
to "do better" before a crowd of tens of thousands of supporters
gathered at a Soweto soccer stadium. Many filed out before he had
finished his speech.
(Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
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