Category Archives: COSATU

SACSIS: On the Political Significance of the Local

http://www.sacsis.org.za/site/article/711.1

On the Political Significance of the Local

By Richard Pithouse

Courage…is a local virtue. It partakes of the morality of the place. – Alain Badiou

There is no denying the import of the very public dramas that play out in the sphere of elite politics. Jacob Zuma’s decision on how to respond to Thuli Madonsela’s report will certainly have some consequence in shaping the trajectory of our increasingly compromised democracy. But politics is about force and reason and reason on its own is seldom a sufficient check on either the construction or renegotiation of common ground by contesting elites.

The old left delusion that a crisis of capital will automatically open the way to some form of subordination of capital to society looks entirely ridiculous in the wake of the financial crisis. The same elites that caused the crisis are dictating a resolution from which they will profit at the direct expense of society. The Greek or British poor will pay a much higher price than any banker in London or New York.

And while a political crisis might reach the point at which a popular refusal to accept dictatorship can have some success, even spectacular success, there is no guarantee that the people who have deposed a dictator will be able to build a new society in keeping with their achievement. The Egyptian drama is not concluded but the seriousness of the attempt to co-opt, deflect and repress popular energies is clear enough.

A crisis, be it economic, political, or both, that arises without a popular politics sufficiently well organised to force through a real alternative is quite likely to strengthen the hand of the social forces that created the crisis in the first place.

One of the respects in which our democracy deviates from the model of donor driven parties largely competing in the realm of media spin is that there is one component of the ruling party, COSATU, that has a large and well organised popular base. It’s possible that things could reach a point at which COSATU could take a decisive step in response to the degeneration of the ANC, a process that was steady under Thabo Mbeki but has collapsed into free fall under Jacob Zuma. But there’s no guarantee that this will happen. And if it does there’s no guarantee that it will fare better than experiments in political trade unionism elsewhere in the region.

COSATU is certainly the most ethical and progressive force in the tripartite alliance and Zwelinzima Vavi’s willingness to call things as they are, has, despite the unedifying spectacle of the inevitable election time flip-flops, won him a degree of admiration amongst both the more progressive elements of the middle class and the organised poor. It is not impossible that COSATU could emerge as a force with sufficiently broad support to challenge the rapid decline of the ANC under Zuma into authoritarianism and corruption.

But the fact that COSATU, at the moment, prefers to ally itself with NGO based civil society rather than the popular struggles rooted in communities is not a good sign. It indicates a political laziness, an elitism and an inability to grasp the profound political significance of the scale at which a unionised job, limited as its security and benefits may be, remains an unrealisable aspiration for millions of young people. And, despite COSATU’s shameful role in the Zuma débâcle, there are clear signs that the trade union federation remains more invested in the illusory hope of the politics of the machinations within the alliance rather than in any attempt to build popular organisation that could link the factory floor to the community.

In the wake of both a widening appreciation of the bankruptcy of the Zuma presidency and the crude and self interested attempts by the ANC Youth League to politicise poverty, there have been a variety of calls for a renegotiation of the deal on which post-apartheid society was founded. There have, for instance, been calls for an ‘economic Codesa’ and a ‘land Codesa’.

Without sufficiently mass based and resolute popular organisation around alternatives any attempt to recalibrate policy and practice will inevitably take the form of an intra-elite negotiation conducted in the interests of elites but in name of the poor.

In the 1980s South Africa became a site of extraordinary political innovation. The experiments in popular democratic practices in the United Democratic Front were, as all politics is, imperfect. But although they were compromised by state repression and a current of millennial fervour there was a real challenge to the elitism of standard forms of representative politics. If the UDF had not accepted the authority of the ANC as absolute, the transition may have played out differently.

But our country remains highly politicised. The extraordinary wave of popular protest that emerged at the turn of the century and gathered real momentum from around 2004 continues. The organisational forms on which this protest depends, and its politics, vary considerably from place to place. But the central progressive idea that has continually reoccurred around the country over the last ten years is an affirmation of the humanity of ordinary people against a political and economic system that, in practice rather than principle, routinely denies that humanity.

It is in this ferment, diverse and contradictory as it is, that the prospects for sustained popular organisation lie. However this politics is often intensely local and in the eyes of many its localism doesn’t sit well with aspirations for national or international change. But without a solid material base, aspirations for change at a higher level are nothing but empty dreams. They are reason without force.

We should recall that for most people sociality is practised, to a significant degree, via the local. There are certainly times when some people are willing to struggle to realise ideas that are, initially anyway, abstracted from their lived reality. But, along with sufficient and sustained commitment, this requires a social structure appropriate to the task. The commune, the Soviet, the council, the congregation and the street committee have their place, and it is a very different place to that of the vanguard party, in the history of popular insurgency for a very good reason. It’s certainly possible for local councils or committees to come together and take on a broader project beyond their local concerns but it is not possible for this to happen when they have not yet come into their own local existence. It’s also the case that every movement that reaches the point of being able to constitute itself on a national or international stage as a material force remains rooted in some sort of local organisation be it particular factories, campuses, prisons, communities, women’s groups, party structures and so on.

There will be no progressive resolution of the crisis into which we have drifted without solid and committed local organisation. And this is not solely a matter of constituting sufficient material force. We should not forget that in politics, as in art, an intense engagement with the particular is the route to the universal. It is at the local where the particularities of the underside of our society are experienced and resisted most directly and intensely.

The Times: Housing heads must roll: Cosatu

http://www.timeslive.co.za/local/article907045.ece/Housing-heads-must-roll–Cosatu

Housing heads must roll: Cosatu
Feb 10, 2011 7:21 PM | By Sapa

“This is a painful example of corruption, gross negligence and incompetence,” the federation said in a statement on Thursday.

“The Minister of Human Settlements, Tokyo Sexwale, must urgently rectify the problems with these houses and ensure that those responsible for this disaster are brought to book.”

Human settlements director-general Thabane Zulu told the human settlements portfolio committee it would cost about R58 billion for the human settlements department to fix poorly built houses.

The federation is “even more outraged” at Zulu’s admission that the department had not yet found a way to blacklist the contractors who built the “substandard houses”.

“Many of them may still have contracts with the national government to build more substandard housing,” Cosatu said.

“Heads must roll for this squandering of taxpayers’ hard-earned money, especially those workers who do not own houses and will have to wait even longer for a house thanks to this debacle.”

The federation said the “outrage” strengthened the argument for measures to be taken to stop the abuse of tendering procedures – which had allowed incompetent builders to keep winning government contracts and failing to deliver the much-needed houses to the people.

We Call on TAC Comrades to Stop Making Divisive Statements and Accusation of ABM WC

We Call on TAC Comrades to Stop Making Divisive Statements and Accusation of ABM WC

The Treatment Action Campaign, Social Justice Coalition and Equal Education have accused Abahlali baseMjondolo in the Western Cape of promoting violence and disrupting their meetings. I would like to make it clear that Abahlali baseMjondolo does not condone violence, meaning harm to persons. Our week of action in October was a strike by shack dwellers, by means of direct action common to protests in other countries. Moreover the accusation that we have disrupted meetings of these organizations is a complete falsehood. Those responsible for disrupting the Irene Grootboom lecture by Comrade Vavi in Site B, and those who disrupted a more recent meeting, are associated with the ANC Youth League in Khayelitsha and not with Abahlali baseMjondolo. We ask these organizations to stop making divisive statements and to publicly withdraw their accusations.

Mzonke Poni,
Abahlali baseMjondolo (Western Cape)
073 2562 036

Business Day: Forcing changes from within

http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/Content.aspx?id=125822

Forcing changes from within

COSATU general secretary Zwelinzima Vavi is wrong to label the African National Congress’s (ANC’s) furious response to his move to cement relations with civil society groups as “paranoid”.

Published: 2010/11/04 07:30:49 AM

COSATU general secretary Zwelinzima Vavi is wrong to label the African National Congress’s (ANC’s) furious response to his move to cement relations with civil society groups as “paranoid”.

Paranoia is an irrational fear of a threat that does not exist, whereas the prospect of SA’s main federation of trade unions — the biggest and best-organised grouping in civil society — cosying up to a range of nongovernmental organisations that focus on the parts of society worst affected by the government’s service delivery failures is potentially a very real threat to the ruling party.

That said, ANC secretary-general Gwede Mantashe’s talk of a move to form a new political party in opposition to the ANC with a view to attempting to effect “regime change” is way over the top. There is no doubt that Cosatu is repositioning itself within the tripartite alliance with the aim of keeping its options open, a wise move given the signs of spreading discontent over ANC corruption and misgovernance.

But the union umbrella has no intention of breaking with the ANC while they believe they still have a shot at gaining dominance over it within the alliance. There are too many advantages to being part of the establishment to go into political opposition and force their members to choose between the organisation they believe best represents their interests, and the party many still see as their liberator from oppression.

Cosatu triumphed over its nationalist-inclined foes during the ANC’s recent national general council, and within days one of its strongest affiliates, the South African Democratic Teachers Union (Sadtu), was vowing that the left wing of the alliance would “come in numbers” to take control of the party at its 2012 elective conference. Less than a month later, former Sadtu general secretary Thulas Nxesi has been appointed deputy minister of rural development and land reform.

Mr Vavi was threatened with disciplinary action for criticising the ANC’s failure to investigate allegations of corruption against then communications minister Siphiwe Nyanda, yet a couple of months later it is Gen Nyanda who is out of a job. With the obvious exception of economic policy, Cosatu’s muscle-flexing is getting results, unlike the ANC rebels who were left with little option but to form the Congress of the People. It’s no secret how that worked out.

Cosatu’s bid to find common ground with other organs of civil society is doubly shrewd given that its claim to represent the poor has always had a hollow ring. Organisations like the Treatment Action Campaign, the Landless People’s Movement and Abahlali baseMjondolo, representing shack dwellers, have often found themselves pitted against the ANC, and by extension its alliance partners. Cosatu is clearly looking to change that by focusing on issues where they have similar concerns, most of which concern failures in service delivery, and steering well away from those where their interests diverge, such as job creation.

The ANC’s failure to deliver on its promises, and concern over its respect for the constitution and independent institutions, has served to revive civil society. The recent formation of the nonpartisan Council for the Advancement of the South African Constitution included prominent members of the ANC, and Cosatu has supported rights-based pressure groups such as Section 27, Equal Education and the Save our SABC coalition.

This points to an organisation that is genuinely concerned about improving service delivery and upholding people’s rights, not one that is hellbent on becoming SA’s version of Zimbabwe’s Movement for Democratic Change, as claimed by Mr Mantashe. But that could be a handy Plan B.

Cape Times: Abahlali’s housing protest ‘to continue’

The Cosatu meeting was disrupted by TR section residents with a help of ANC youth league not by ABM WC. Every protest in Khayelitsha is being ascribed to AbM WC at the moment but this is not the case.

http://www.capetimes.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=5694105

Abahlali’s housing protest ‘to continue’

October 20, 2010 Edition 1

Quinton Mtyala

SHACK dwellers’ movement Abahlali baseMjondolo (AbM) has vowed to continue its “strike” protest in Khayelitsha following an “unsuccessful” meeting with provincial head of Human Settlements Mbulelo Tshangana.

Yesterday, Tshangana spent over three hours explaining the provincial government’s plan for the upgrade of informal settlements and its new plan for housing delivery.

But Khayelitsha community activist and leading AbM member Mzonki Poni said Tshangana had failed to address the concerns of communities who, through barricades and attacks on buses, have protested against their living conditions in some of the city’s worst informal settlements.

“The meeting does not really speak to the memorandum we delivered two weeks ago. We’ll apply pressure. It’s not just about making noise (by toyi-toying),” Poni said.

He said AbM would “engage” with the provincial government and city officials until it was satisfied there was a concrete plan for people living in informal settlements.

Asked if this meant a continuation of the protests, the latest of which disrupted a meeting addressed by Cosatu general secretary Zwelinzima Vavi on Monday night, Poni said: “Yes”.

quinton.mtyala@inl.co.za