Jump to navigation

South Africa

Zuma’s party trains its guns on the EFF following major defection

The opposition is in turmoil after Malema’s deputy jumped ship to join the fledgling MK party

The defection of Floyd Shivambu to Jacob Zuma’s uMkhonto weSizwe party has dealt a hammer blow to Julius Malema’s Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), particularly now that Shivambu has been appointed as MK’s national organiser.

The former deputy leader, Shivambu resigned from the EFF last week after having been one of its founding members alongside Malema in 2013.

Shivambu’s new job includes building branches and regions nationwide, overseeing research and policy development, and appointing MK party members to parliament and provincial legislatures.

MK emerged from nowhere in December 2023, to win 58 seats on 14.6% of the vote in May’s general election, despite having minimal organisation and appearing to be little more than a vehicle for former President Zuma. In the process, it pushed the EFF into fourth place at 9.5% (AC Vol 65 No 12, Choices get starker after the ANC vote crash).

MK’s future viability as a party likely depends on peeling off what remains of Zuma’s support base in the African National Congress (ANC) and by eating into what remains of the EFF’s vote. The two parties have similar economic policies, particularly on land expropriation and nationalisation of the mines and the central bank.

Shivambu has refused to say why he chose to leave the EFF. However, he has already hinted at pushing for a unified ‘progressive caucus’ that would oppose the ANC/Democratic Alliance-led Government of National Unity.

‘This thing of small, unviable political parties of South Africa is not sustainable for the future of black people in South Africa,’ he said on 22 August.

In a post-mortem of the May elections, former Director-General in the Presidency, Joel Netshitenzhe, warned that ethnic identity-based voting shows no sign of dying out. Should Zuma’s MK develop a party infrastructure, it has a substantial constituency of votes that it could tap into (Dispatches 7/8/24, Chastened ANC pins the blame on Jacob Zuma).



Related Articles

Choices get starker after the ANC vote crash

Shorn of a majority, Cyril Ramaphosa must choose between populists or pro-business centrists in a power-sharing deal

After its worst election in 30 years of power, the African National Congress (ANC) saw its vote share tumble to 40.2% and faces choices which will usher in...

READ FOR FREE

DISPATCHES

Chastened ANC pins the blame on Jacob Zuma

The former President has been expelled from the ANC - the party he once led - after campaigning for a rival party in the 2024 election

The African National Congress’s (ANC) move to pin the blame for its worst results in three decades on ex-President Jacob Zuma risks whitewashing the failures of President Cyril...

READ FOR FREE

Fake broadcast news

Cyril Ramaphosa's supporters have claimed that the broadcast of the wrong version of the President's recent address to the nation was 'deliberate sabotage' by supporters and appointees in...


Starting the post-Zuma race

Backing from the ANC's top policy-making committee means that President Zuma can hang on but his authority is shrinking

This has been one of Jacob Zuma's worst months since becoming President in 2009. On 25 November, the mounting list of corruption allegations against him are to be...


Kingdom in peril

The death of the Zulu king, Goodwill Zwelithini, promises turmoil for the already volatile province of KwaZulu-Natal

The death of King Goodwill Zwelithini, 72, from Covid-19 complications on 12 March, without agreement on how the succession should be managed will complicate the kingdom's already stormy...