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Cosatu distances itself from SACP’s by-election move, calling it ‘hasty’

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Solly Mapaila. Picture: Felix Dlangamandla (Netwerk24)
Solly Mapaila. Picture: Felix Dlangamandla (Netwerk24)

Trade union federation Cosatu has accused the SACP of moving ahead of the workers on its decision to go it alone in this week’s by-elections in Metsimaholo, Free State. Residents voted on Wednesday in the municipality’s by-election. The SACP, in a historic move, contested for power in the 21 wards.

The SACP’s first deputy president Solly Mapaila said that the party had displayed a great deal of “arrogance”, causing people, particularly in Metsimaholo, to reject the governing party.

The SACP made the decision to contest elections in the embattled municipality at the eleventh hour, pitting itself against its alliance partner.

However, it didn’t have the might and support of workers behind it. A Cosatu resolution dictates that its unions and members would campaign and vote only for the ANC during elections.

The federation’s deputy general secretary, Solly Phetoe, explained to journalists during a media briefing following the federation’s central executive committee meeting why it couldn’t support the SACP.

“We have a resolution coming from the 12th national congress of Cosatu to support the ANC during the elections,” said Phetoe.

He added that the decision could only be reviewed by congress, which is scheduled for September 2018.

Expanding on the federation’s views, its president Sdumo Dlamini told News24 that Cosatu saw the SACP as the vanguard which must always represent the working class. “Otherwise you plunge the SACP into a quagmire of moving ahead of everybody and failing on the expectations of the working class,” said Dlamini.

Results for the hotly contested polls have yet to be officially released by the electoral commission. Huffington Post has reported that it is still investigating vote-rigging claims brought by the SACP against its alliance partner, the ANC.

Dlamini said the SACP presented its own congress outcomes on popular and state power, along with the communist party’s view on contesting elections to the central executive committee this week.

“We said, ‘Allow us as Cosatu to engage on what you are saying’,” he said insisting, however, that the federation’s congress decision to support the ANC in every local, provincial and national election stood.

Dlamini said Cosatu understood and respected the SACP’s decision, but that in the journey it had chosen to undertake it needed to make sure that it remained in touch with the workers so the communist party doesn’t end up at odds with the working class.

He told News24 that the central executive committee told the SACP it made the decision to contest hastily.

“In this context you had Cosatu workers in that space who have issues, issues with the ANC who also know Cosatu’s decision on the ANC,” said Dlamini.

“You are putting them into a bit of a dilemma, are they going to be behaving like they are ill-disciplined in Cosatu by ignoring the congress resolution, or are they ill-disciplined as members of the SACP by ignoring the congress position of the communist party?” he asked. – News24

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