Cyril and the soft-shoe shuffle, plus five highlights from ‘Vrye Weekblad’
Here’s what’s hot in the latest edition of the Afrikaans digital weekly
Image: MARK ANDREWS
President Cyril Ramaphosa has no hope of rescuing SA from the state capture swamp unless he tidies up the scrapyard of his own political home, writes Piet Croucamp in today’s new issue of Vrye Weekblad.
There is a quite understandable but unwise fixation in white Pretoria and the media with the process of decapturing the state under Cyril Ramaphosa. In fact, the appointment of a new management team at the National Prosecution Agency (NPA) and the cleanup operation at state-owned enterprises like Eskom were low-hanging fruits for the buffalo farmer.
Considerably more impressive is the way in which he has recharted the historical and codified power relations inside Luthuli House. His soft-shoe shuffle at headquarters is a truer indication of the power he currently holds.
Two presidents have since the Polokwane Conference had to vacate their positions prematurely, with both escorted out of office by Luthuli House’s top six. In both cases, Gwede Mantashe was at the centre of the mutiny, and if Ramaphosa doesn’t rise to the occasion over the next two years, the struggling cattle farmer from Elliot will be back on the scene.
Read the rest of Croucamp’s analysis in today’s new issue of Vrye Weekblad.
In this context, two questions remain relevant concerning the public political spectacle of the ANC’s infighting. The first is, will Ramaphosa survive the battle against individuals such as Jacob Zuma, Ace Magashule, Carl Niehaus and the rest of the RET faction? The consensus appears to be that the ANC president emerged victorious from the most recent duel between him and Magashule.
The real victory, however, is that Ramaphosa was able to steer the NEC of the ANC to a supposed consensus that tied off Magashule’s main political arteries. His tactical management of the NEC also sent Jacob Zuma’s attempts to secure a political rather than a legal settlement down a cul de sac. Both Zuma and Magashule are fighting for their political survival from a deep trench. Their situations now require fairly desperate actions to avoid the inevitable political desert.
The second question is, what will the ruling party look like at the end of the process.
Read this analysis of the state of the ruling party, plus more news and analysis in this week's issue of Vrye Weekblad.