Politics of South Africa

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South Africa

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The Republic of South Africa is a federal, parliamentary republic. The President of South Africa is both head of state and head of government; in the same manner as the prime minister of other nations, he is elected by the National Assembly (the lower house of the South African Parliament) and must enjoy the confidence of the Assembly in order to remain in office. South Africans also elect provincial legislatures which govern in respect of each of the country's nine provinces.

Since the end of apartheid, South Africa's politics has been dominated by the African National Congress (ANC). The ANC is the ruling party in the national legislature, as well as in eight of the nine provinces, having received 65.9% of the vote during the 2009 general election and 66.3% of the vote in the 2006 municipal election. The main challenger to the ANC's rule is the Democratic Alliance, led by Helen Zille, which received 16.66% of the vote in the 2009 election and 14.8% in the 2006 election. Other major political parties represented in Parliament are the Inkatha Freedom Party, which mainly represents Zulu voters, with 4.55%; and the Congress of the People with 7.42% in the 2009 election. The formerly dominant New National Party, who introduced apartheid through its predecessor the National Party, disbanded in 2005 to merge with the ANC. The current South African president is Jacob Zuma.

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South African Government

South Africa is a federal parliamentary representative democratic republic, wherein the President of South Africa, elected by parliament, is the head of government, and of a multi-party system. Executive power is exercised by the government. Legislative power is vested in both the government and the two chambers of Parliament, the Council of Provinces and the National Assembly. The Judiciary is independent of the executive and the legislature. Government is three-tiered, with representatives being elected at the national, provincial and local levels.

The central area of Pretoria, the administrative capital of South Africa.

Constitution

Following the 1994 elections, South Africa was governed under an interim constitution. This constitution required the Constituent Assembly (CA) to draft and approve a permanent constitution by 9 May 1996.

The Government of National Unity (GNU) established under the interim constitution ostensibly remained in effect until the 1999 national elections. The parties originally comprising the GNU — the African National Congress (ANC), the National Party (NP), and the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) — shared executive power. On 30 June 1996, the NP withdrew from the GNU to become part of the opposition.

President

Under the Constitution, the President is both head of state and head of government.

Political parties and their current vote share

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General elections are held every 5 years. The first fully multi-racial democratic election was held in 1994, the second in 1999, the third in 2004, and the most recent in 2009. Until 2008, elected officials were allowed to change political party, while retaining their seats, during set windows which occurred twice each electoral term, due to controversial floor crossing legislative amendments made in 2002. The last two floor crossing windows were in 2005 and 2007.

After the 2009 elections, the ANC lost its two-thirds majority in the national legislature which had allowed it to unilaterally alter the constitution.

The Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) and the South African Communist Party (SACP) are in a formal alliance with the ruling ANC, and thus do not stand separately for election.


e • d Summary of the 22 April 2009 South African National Assembly election results
Parties Leaders Votes % Seats
Floor crossing[1] 2009
[2]
+/–
2009 +/− 2005 2007 Dissol.
African National Congress (ANC) Jacob Zuma 11,650,748 65.90 −3.79 +14 +4 297 264 −33
Democratic Alliance (DA) Helen Zille 2,945,829 16.66 +4.29 −3 ±0 47 67 +20
Congress of the People (COPE) Mosiuoa Lekota 1,311,027 7.42 +7.42 new 30 +30
Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) Mangosuthu Buthelezi 804,260 4.55 −2.42 −5 ±0 23 18 −5
Independent Democrats (ID) Patricia de Lille 162,915 0.92 −0.78 −2 −1 4 4 ±0
United Democratic Movement (UDM) Bantu Holomisa 149,680 0.85 −1.43 −3 ±0 6 4 −2
Freedom Front Plus (VF+) Pieter Mulder 146,796 0.83 −0.06 ±0 ±0 4 4 ±0
African Christian Democratic Party (ACDP) Kenneth Meshoe 142,658 0.81 −0.79 −3 ±0 4 3 −1
United Christian Democratic Party (UCDP) Lucas Mangope 66,086 0.37 −0.38 ±0 ±0 3 2 −1
Pan Africanist Congress (PAC) Motsoko Pheko 48,530 0.27 −0.46 ±0 −2 1 1 ±0
Minority Front (MF) Amichand Rajbansi 43,474 0.25 −0.10 ±0 ±0 2 1 −1
Azanian People's Organisation (AZAPO) Mosibudi Mangena 38,245 0.22 −0.03 ±0 ±0 1 1 ±0
African Peoples' Convention (APC) Themba Godi 35,867 0.20 +0.20 +2 2 1 −1
Movement Democratic Party (MDP) 29,747 0.17 +0.17 new 0 ±0
Al Jama-ah Abdul Gamiet Flacks 25,947 0.15 +0.15 new 0 ±0
Christian Democratic Alliance (CDA)* Louis Michael Green 11,638 0.07 −0.13 new 0 ±0
National Democratic Convention (NADECO) Hawu Mbatha 10,830 0.06 +0.06 +4 ±0 4 0 −4
New Vision Party (NVP) 9,296 0.05 +0.05 new 0 ±0
United Independent Front (UIF) Malizole Diko 8,872 0.05 +0.05 +2 −2 0 0 ±0
Great Kongress of SA (GKSA) 8,271 0.05 +0.05 new 0 ±0
South African Democratic Congress (SADECO) Ziba Jiyane 6,035 0.03 +0.03 new 0 ±0
Keep It Straight and Simple (KISS) C.C. Emary 5,440 0.03 −0.01 new 0 ±0
Pan Africanist Movement (PAM) 5,426 0.03 +0.03 new 0 ±0
Alliance of Free Democrats (AFD) 5,178 0.03 +0.03 new 0 ±0
Women Forward (WF) 5,087 0.03 +0.03 new 0 ±0
A Party 2,847 0.02 +0.02 new 0 ±0
New National Party (NNP) (joined ANC in 2005) Marthinus van Schalkwyk −1.65 −7 did not run 0 0
Christian Democratic Party (CDP) (see CDA) Theunis Botha −0.04 did not run 0
National Action (NA) Jacobus Frederick Jonker −0.10 did not run 0
Peace and Justice Congress (PJC) Muhammed Rashad Khan −0.10 did not run 0
Socialist Party of Azania (SOPA) Tiyani Lybon Mabasa −0.10 did not run 0
New Labour Party (NLP) (see CDA) Colin Francois du Sart −0.10 did not run 0
United Front (UF) T. D. Hlatshwayo −0.08 did not run 0
Employment Movement of South Africa (EMSA) M. Reitz −0.07 did not run 0
The Organisation Party (TOP) Bradford Wood −0.05 did not run 0
Federation of Democrats (FD)[1] +1 ±0 1 0 −1
National Alliance (NA)[1] 1 0 −1
United Party of South Africa (UPSA)[1] 1 −1 0 0 ±0
Progressive Independent Movement (PIM)[1] +1 −1 0 0 ±0
Total 17,680,729 100.0 400 400
Spoilt votes (% is of all votes cast)[3][4] 239,237 1.34 −0.25

Notes:

* The 2009 Christian Democratic Alliance (CDA) was an alliance of the 2004 Christian Democratic Party (CDP), the 2004 New Labour Party (NLP) and other parties that weren't on the 2004 national ballot.

Challenges ahead

The post-apartheid Government of South Africa have made remarkable progress in consolidating the nation's peaceful transition to democracy. Programs to improve the delivery of essential social services to the majority of the population are underway. Access to better opportunities in education and business is becoming more widespread.[citation needed] Nevertheless, transforming South Africa's society to remove the legacy of apartheid will be a long-term process requiring the sustained commitment of the leaders and people of the nation's disparate groups.[citation needed]

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), chaired by 1984 Nobel Peace Prize winner Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu, helped to advance the reconciliation process. Constituted in 1996 and having completed its work by 2001, the TRC was empowered to investigate apartheid-era human rights abuses committed between 1960 and 10 May 1994, to grant amnesty to those who committed politically motivated crimes and to recommend compensation to victims of abuses. The TRC's mandate was part of the larger process of reconciling the often conflicting political, economic, and cultural interests held by the many peoples that make up South Africa's diverse population One important issue continues to be the relationship of provincial and local administrative structures to the national government. Prior to 27 April 1994, South Africa was divided into four provinces and 10 black "homelands", four of which were considered independent by the South African Government. Both the interim constitution and the new 1997 constitution abolished this system and substituted nine provinces. Each province has an elected legislature and chief executive — the provincial premier. Although in form a federal system, in practice the nature of the relationship between the central and provincial governments continues to be the subject of considerable debate, particularly among groups desiring a greater measure of autonomy from the central government. A key step in defining the relationship came in 1997 when provincial governments were given more than half of central government funding and permitted to develop and manage their own budgets.

Although South Africa's economy is in many areas highly developed, the exclusionary nature of apartheid and distortions caused in part by the country's international isolation until the 1990s have left major weaknesses. The economy is now in a process of transition as the government seeks to address the inequities of apartheid, stimulate growth, and create jobs. By following a fiscally conservative economic platform there has been a lack of funding for social welfare programs. Unemployment has risen dramatically in the last ten years. The HDI of South Africa has dropped 35 places between 1995 and 2005[5]. Business, meanwhile, is becoming more integrated into the international system, and foreign investment has increased dramatically over the past several years. Still, the economic disparities between population groups are expected to persist for many years.

Other legacies of Apartheid in South African politics

Many leaders of former Bantustans or Homelands have had a role in South African politics since their abolition.

Mangosuthu Buthelezi was chief minister of his Kwa-Zulu homeland from 1976 until 1994. In post-apartheid South Africa he has served as President of the Inkatha Freedom Party. Bantubonke Holomisa, who was a general in the homeland of Transkei from 1987, has served as the president of the United Democratic Movement since 1997. General Constand Viljoen an Afrikaner who served as chief of the South African Defence Force sent 1500 of his militiamen to protect Lucas Mangope and to contest the termination of Bophuthatswana as a homeland in 1994. He founded the Freedom Front in 1994. Lucas Mangope, former chief of the Motsweda Ba hurutshe-Boo-Manyane tribe of the Tswana and head of Bophuthatswana is President of the people.

Human rights

The new constitution's bill of rights provides extensive guarantees, including equality before the law and prohibitions against discrimination; the right to life, privacy, property, and freedom and security of the person; prohibition against slavery and forced labor; and freedom of speech, religion, assembly, and association. The legal rights of criminal suspects also are enumerated. The constitution provides for an independent and impartial judiciary, and, in practice, these provisions are respected.

Citizens' entitlements to a safe environment, housing, education, and health care are included in the bill of rights, and are known as secondary constitutional rights. In 2003 the constitutional secondary rights were used by the HIV/AIDS activist group the Treatment Action Campaign as a means of forcing the government to change its health policy.

Since the abolition of apartheid, levels of political violence in South Africa have dropped dramatically. Violent crime and organized criminal activity are at high levels and are a grave concern. Partly as a result, vigilante action and mob justice sometimes occur.

Some members of the police commit abuses, and deaths in police custody as a result of excessive force remain a problem. The government has taken action to investigate and punish some of those who commit such abuses. In April 1997, the government established an Independent Complaints Directorate to investigate deaths in police custody and deaths resulting from police action.

Although South Africa's society is undergoing a rapid transformation, some discrimination against women continues, and discrimination against those living with HIV/AIDS is becoming serious. Violence against women and children also is a serious problem.

References

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