SACP and COSATU.png

 

20 February 2016

 

 

SACP‎-COSATU Bilateral Statement

 

 

The SACP and COSATU senior leaderships, led by SACP general secretary cde
Blade Nzimande and COSATU president cde Sidumo Dlamini respectively, met in
a high-level bilateral yesterday, 19th February. The two formations shared
perspectives on the current national and international situation.
Everywhere, monopoly capital seeks to make its own crisis the crisis of the
working class, of the urban and rural poor, and of a wide array of middle
strata. In South Africa the offensive against the organised working class
persists as capital and its ideologues seek to respond to falling profits
and sluggish growth by dismantling the hard won rights of the trade union
movement.

 

The bilateral also identified the emergence of a parasitic bourgeoisie that
seeks to entrench itself within key sectors of the state and particularly
within strategic state-owned corporations as an imminent threat to our
democracy, our broader movement, and indeed to the ability of our democratic
state to drive forward an inclusive and sustainable growth path. Our two
formations committed to exposing and fearlessly dealing with those
associated with state capture through parasitism in public sector formations
and indeed within any of our own movement structures.

 

The SACP and COSATU delegations agreed that the situation called for a
closing of ranks between our two formations, and for the intensification of
joint political, ideological and mass campaigning work. Indeed, in the
current circumstances, the two working class formations within the ANC-led
alliance have particular responsibilities. 

 

Comprehensive social security system

 

The bilateral agreed that, in the coming week, we will take back to our
respective decision-making structures (the SACP’s Central Committee and
COSATU’s Central Executive Committee) a proposal to campaign around the
transformation of the financial sector and link this to the struggle for a
comprehensive social security system.

 

Over 10 million credit active South Africans have impaired records, being
three months and more in arrears. Unsecured credit in South Africa grew from
R40 billion in 2008 to R172 billion in 2014. Much of this credit is for
immediate consumption. An estimated 40% of loans from micro-lenders is to
buy food. 65% of consumers of non-mortgage loans earn less than R8 000 per
month. With mass retrenchments in the mining sector, with rising food
prices, the household debt crisis will deepen. It is a crisis that is
affecting the unemployed, the under-employed and casualised, unionized
workers, families supporting students, and, indeed, large swathes of the
so-called “new black middle class” whose middle-class status is typically
only possible through unsustainable indebtedness. 

 

This situation is a symptom of a dysfunctional financial sector and of the
failure to provide affordable housing and accommodation, public transport
and public health-care. The situation is further aggravated by the predatory
behaviour of capital with the collusion of corrupt elements in the courts
and police. There is widespread abuse of garnishee orders, for instance, and
of housing evictions.

 

The struggle for a transformed, people-friendly financial sector and the
review of the appropriate approach to provident fund reform are both
inextricably linked to the need for a comprehensive social security system
that responds to the reality of our situation.  It is a situation in which
mass unemployment is not a temporary phenomenon for many, and in which
worker retirement funds and different social grants are typically not used
only by the individual recipients but are needed to support extended
households.

 

Reverse perverted practices

 

The bilateral reaffirmed that both the SACP and COSATU will be actively
supporting the ANC in the forthcoming local government elections. It is
critical that both the neo-liberal centre-right DA and the dangerous,
demagogic EFF are roundly defeated. In expressing our support for the ANC,
our two formations warned however that we will not be able to support
candidates thrust upon local communities through perverted, undemocratic
processes that are in flagrant defiance of the ANC’s own clear nominations
procedures. We call on the ANC national leadership to ensure that where they
have occurred these perverted practices are reversed. 

 

The bilateral noted the Constitutional Court hearing earlier this month into
the powers of the public protector. We expressed our full support for the
Constitutional Court.

 

 

Contact‎:

Sizwe Pamla, COSATU National Spokesperson, 060 975 6794

Alex Mashilo, SACP National Spokesperson, 082 920 0308 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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