Thursday 4 August 2016

Breaking News: ANC Lashed With Lowest Electtion Results Today

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South Africa's governing African National Congress (ANC) looks to be facing its biggest electoral setback since the end of apartheid with most votes now counted in local elections.


The party is trailing its main rival, the Democratic Alliance, in Port Elizabeth, Johannesburg and Pretoria.

The ANC is in the lead nationally and many results have yet to come in.

Unemployment and corruption scandals surrounding President Jacob Zuma have tarnished the ANC's image.

The municipal election result is probably the biggest wake-up call the governing African National Congress has received since it ushered in democracy in South Africa in 1994.

Clearly the ANC still commands huge support across the country but that support is waning. It can no longer take it for granted that the black majority will blindly follow it.

Its power and influence is in decline.

In-fighting, public squabbles and a host of corruption scandals have been slowly eating away at the reputation of a once glorious movement of the people.

The best example is in the Nelson Mandela Bay municipality where the ANC is lagging behind in a city which has a rich history of anti-apartheid struggle. The man poised to be the new mayor is the Democratic Alliance's Athol Trollip, who is white.

Twenty-two years after the end of apartheid, black people are now voting on issues and not on race. Mr Trollip, who speaks fluent Xhosa, would not be where he is if the vast majority of black people had not voted for him.

The ANC has won more than 60% of the vote at every election since the end of apartheid more than two decades ago.

With two-thirds of the votes counted on Thursday, the ANC had 53%, followed by 28% for the Democratic Alliance and 7% for the radical Economic Freedom Fighters.

The Democratic Alliance looked on course to keep control of Cape Town, the only major city currently not run by the ANC.

The local elections are being seen as an indication of the mid-term popularity of President Zuma. Correspondents say a poor ANC performance could embolden Mr Zuma's rivals within the party to challenge him.

The next presidential elections are due in 2019 but Mr Zuma cannot stand for a third term.

South Africa's economy has also been one of the main issues for voters, with growth expected to be zero this year, and unemployment standing at 27%.

Protests demanding better housing and amenities have sprung up across South Africa.

Mr Zuma has also had to weather a corruption scandal, after being ordered to repay taxpayers' money spent on his private home.

Security was tight for the elections and the electoral commission said voting had passed off smoothly.

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