SACP Central Committee Statement

 

 

Malesela Maleka, National Spokesperson, 24 May 2009

 

 

The SACP Central Committee met in Johannesburg on the 22nd and 23rd May
2009.  This was the first plenary CC meeting after the April 22nd
elections, and the Political and Organisational Reports and ensuing
discussion devoted considerable time to assessing the election campaign
and the way forward.

 

Victory

 

The CC noted the outstanding electoral victory achieved by the ANC and
its alliance. The sustained, nearly two-thirds majority is a remarkable
achievement for a movement that has now been an incumbent ruling party
for 15 years. The electoral victory was all the more notable because it
came in the midst of what was potentially a serious breakaway from
within the leadership core of the ANC. The victory was also notable
because it was achieved against an unremitting and extremely hostile
year-long ideological offensive mounted against the ANC and its alliance
from a large part of the media and the middle class intelligentsia in
our country.

 

The CC agreed that the electoral victory was the victory of the working
class and poor of our country, who mobilised in overwhelming numbers to
defend their movement, and to defend and advance the gains achieved over
the past 15 years. The election victory was also notable for the high
levels of participation by the youth sector, and the ability of the
ANC-led movement to connect dynamically with a new generation of
citizens.

 

Anti-ANC "public" opinion

 

There are, however, important challenges following April 22nd.  The
anti-ANC "public" opinion constructed by the media and chattering
classes was roundly rebuffed by the actuality of popular opinion in our
African mass base in townships and rural villages throughout our
country. However, the media offensive did have an impact upon minority
communities, including working class minority communities. This was
seized upon by the opposition parties, notably the DA, which ran a
thinly disguised, subliminal racist campaign in defence of perceived
minority interests. Advances in building a non-racial society over the
past decade and a half have suffered. The SACP calls on its membership
and the working class movement to defeat racism, and to build a
principled non-racial solidarity, particularly based on working class
solidarity in the struggle to overcome the crises of unemployment,
poverty and inequality. 

 

We also need to engage actively and constructively with media
professionals, academic institutions and think-tanks in our country.
Much of the anti-ANC ideological offensive over the past year has been
framed as a conflict between "populism" and the defence of various
"liberal" constitutional rights (media freedom, freedom of speech,
independence of the judiciary, academic freedom, etc.). The SACP fully
supports these constitutional rights, but we strongly reject the notion
that these rights can be defended and consolidated without connecting
them to other critical rights - the right of all to access to education,
the right to employment, the right to shelter, etc. Nothing is more
distasteful than the former upholders of apartheid, who had to be forced
into our new constitutional dispensation, now posing as the defenders of
constitutional rights.   

 

Our electoral victory, of course, now places a huge responsibility on
the ANC and its alliance partners. We cannot pretend that our
comfortable electoral majority is secure for all time. In the face of
the global capitalist melt-down and in the face of persisting systemic
crises within our own society - deep-seated inequality, crisis-levels of
unemployment, and wide-ranging poverty - the next five years must be
marked by a sustained effort at transforming the underlying factors that
are reproducing these crises of under-development. In particular, we
need to place our economic growth path onto a new job-creating and more
egalitarian trajectory.

 

We assume full and collective responsibility

 

The CC congratulated all SACP members who have been elected as ANC
public representatives in Parliament and in provincial legislatures -
overall, some 14% of ANC elected representatives are SACP members. The
CC also congratulated the many SACP members who have now been deployed
into senior positions in legislatures and executives. While there has
been a minor campaign in some quarters of the media to suggest that
these deployments are controversial within the SACP, certainly in the CC
there was unanimous support for the idea that the SACP, working closely
with its alliance partners, must never position itself simply an
extra-parliamentary oppositionist bloc. We must assume full and
collective responsibility for governance. 

 

This will require, however, that we ensure that Communist deployees in
executives and other senior positions must set an example of activist
and participatory governance - in which popular organisation and
mobilisation is not seen as inherently conflictual with the important
governance tasks confronting our country. At the same time, maintaining
a strong and independent SACP is the prerequisite for a Party and for a
cadreship of communists that are able to build a principled mass-based
Alliance. To this end, the CC is also seized with strengthening the
organisational machinery of the SACP. In doing this, we will be building
on our activist cadre that has played such an outstanding role in the
election campaign.

 

Collins Chabane

 

The new Minister in the Presidency, cde Collins Chabane, was invited to
the CC to brief our meeting on the newly reconfigured national
executive. The CC noted that the issues raised in this regard over the
past year by the SACP had been taken into consideration, and welcomed
the efforts to ensure that we build a strategically focused, better
coordinated and more effective developmental state. In particular, we
welcome the establishment of a planning commission, and a cabinet
cluster that will focus on economic policy and specifically industrial
policy. The CC agreed that the reconfiguration needs to proceed in a
phased but rapid fashion, and that we must ensure that reconfiguration
does not consume all our energies to the detriment of actual
implementation of our key programmes. 

 

The CC also received a briefing from the City of Johannesburg on its
public transport plans as an innovation that needs to be engaged with in
the light of the coming Confederations Cup, 2010, and the need for
affordable, accessible, safe and efficient public transport systems
throughout our country. 

 

Public transport

 

At present, public transport often remains untransformed, relatively
unregulated and operator-controlled. We need to transform this reality
into public transport that is a publicly controlled and regulated
reality in which the needs of communities are prioritised. The CC
resolved to re-launch our former Red October public transport campaign,
beginning here in Johannesburg. In the coming weeks, working together
with a wide cross-section of commuter, trade union, driver, small
operator, and community formations we will be campaigning for
transformed public transport. It is critical that the future of public
transport in our cities is not left simply to a (sometimes hostile)
dialogue between government and taxi operators.

 

Financial sector campaign

 

The CC also resolved to reinvigorate our long-running financial sector
campaign. In the light of the current global capitalist economic
melt-down and its impact on South African consumers, households and
small businesses there is an increase in repossession of houses, cars
and other items, and the closure of small businesses and the likely
increase of black-listings. 

 

The CC briefly discussed the question of ethics for executive members in
government. The CC commended the Minister of Transport, cde Sbu Ndebele,
for handing back the luxury car that he had received from a group of
small contractors. This episode raises wider questions. The SACP
strongly believes that no-one in government should receive a gift from
the public for doing what is, in any case, their job. What is more,
government delivery should not be seen as personal patronage from an
individual government leader - it is a collective effort and a
collective responsibility. 

 

Vodacom

 

The SACP in the past week has supported COSATU in its efforts to reverse
the sale of Vodacom to majority foreign ownership. In the light of the
court decision to decline a ruling in this direction, we will be working
closely with our alliance partners to chart a way forward. One thing is
clear; the problematic way in which this sale has been handled (which
the court itself acknowledged) is just one small part of a much wider
problem. Our IT and telecommunications sector has been badly mismanaged,
largely by a former leading cadre in government (formerly, but no
longer, associated with the ANC). Moreover, this is not just a question
of mismanagement. All the evidence points to a systematic ripping-off of
public and national resources in the interests of an avaricious personal
accumulation agenda. In particular, the future of Telkom has now been
seriously compromised. The SACP calls for a comprehensive ICT plan that
places at its centre universal access and affordable quality service.

 

SABC

 

With new legislation and a new Parliament in place, the SACP now calls
for the rapid dissolving of the current SABC Board. The imperative of
urgent moves in this direction has been reinforced by the new evidence
of massive financial losses in the SABC, the consequence of gross
mismanagement. The current Board has presided over this implosion of
this public resource, and it must now go. The SABC must be rescued and
it must be re-built as a public broadcaster that serves all the citizens
of our country, and not narrow factional or party political objectives.

 

Issued by the SACP

 

Malesela Maleka, SACP Spokesperson, 082 226 1802, [email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]> 

 

 


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