Madiba ‘would have voted ANC’


Pretoria – Former president Nelson Mandela would have been happy with the 2014 elections, and would have encouraged voters to give the ANC another chance, believes Gauteng Premier Nomvula Mokonyane.

“He would have voted for the ANC, and he would have encouraged everybody to give the ANC another chance,” she told News24.

Mokonyane was sitting next to Mandela’s former wife, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, at the IEC’s national results operations centre in Pretoria.

Madikizela-Mandela declined interviews.

Mokonyane added that she was very happy with the ANC’s result in Gauteng.

“Everybody thought that the ANC would lose, other people came very determined that they would take over.

“We could have done better but the fact of the matter is that everybody who assumed that the ANC would not be in power has been proven wrong. But the ANC must go back and make do a proper assessment as to how did we perform, and how best we can take our percentage higher.”

Mokonyane added that the ANC was not worried about opposition parties, and its election campaign focused on what would be best for its communities rather than other parties.

“We’re not worried about the EFF, we’re worried about unemployment, poverty and inequality,” she said.

The ANC won 11.4m votes, or 62.2% of votes in the national election, and 54.92% of the vote in Gauteng. The party faced a strong challenge from the DA, which won 28.52% of the vote in the province, while the EFF received 10.26% of votes.-Sapa

IEC orders vote recount in Musina


Polokwane – The IEC has ordered a vote recount on Friday at a Musina polling station in Limpopo after results showed that the EFF and the DA each failed to get a single vote on the national ballot.

Oddly, the same results indicated that 151 and 83 provincial ballots from that polling station went to the two parties respectively.
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Free State vote counting concluded


Pretoria – Vote counting in the Free State was completed on Friday night, with preliminary results showing the ANC to have comfortably won the province, according to the Electoral Commission of SA.
Following 100% of the 1 523 voting districts reporting across the province, the ANC was found to have won 69.85% of the vote, equal to 708 720 votes, out of total of 1 014 663 valid votes cast, with 14 634 votes spoilt.

The DA came second with 16.23% (164 672 votes), becoming the official opposition in the province, replacing the Congress of the People (Cope).

Fledging party Economic Freedom Fighters secured third place, receiving 8.15% (82 674 votes).

Fourth belonged to the Freedom Front Plus, which received 2.10% (21 339 votes).

Cope came fifth with 1.63% (16 516 votes).

A total of 1 449 488 voters were registered to vote in the province before election day on Wednesday, with turnout being 71.01%.

In 2009, the ANC won the province with 71.10% of the vote (734 688 votes), followed by the Congress of the People with 11.61% (120 018 votes), the DA with 11.6% (119 844 votes), Freedom Font Plus with 2.01% (20 780 votes), and the Dikwankwetla Party of SA with 1.09% (11 257 votes).-Sapa

Grants helped keep ANC in power – analyst


Pretoria – The ANC shrugged off a slide in its support as results on Friday showed it had won an overwhelming election victory, while the opposition hailed its own improved showing.

With few votes left to be counted, the ANC was on a little over 62% – down from more than 65% in 2009.

The Democratic Alliance (DA) had more than 22% – up from 17% in the last elections.

The DA also hung onto power in with an increased majority in the Western Cape, the only one of nine provinces not controlled by the ANC.

“Any party that gets over 60% of the votes, that party has massive, resounding support. So we’re not unduly worried about the loss of three percent or so,” said African National Congress spokesperson Jackson Mthembu.

DA leader Helen Zille, whose party is accused by the ANC of representing whites and the elite, said the results proved its appeal was spreading among blacks.

“We grew by 1.1 million votes, of which 700 000 came from black South Africans,” she said at the national results centre in Pretoria.

“So the argument that I still hear today… that the DA has now reached it ceiling and cannot grow anymore, that argument, simply by the election results, has been blown out of the water.”

The ANC’s victory nationally gives it a parliamentary majority big enough to hand embattled President Jacob Zuma a second five-year term.

But it has fallen short of the two-thirds majority needed to amend the Constitution and has seen its winning margin reduced for a second consecutive election.

The real surprise of the election was not that the ANC’s share of the vote dropped, but that it dropped so little, said political commentator Steven Friedman.

Analyst Moeletsi Mbeki said government social grants – particularly in the rural areas – helped the ANC maintain its support.

“So for them whether the ANC is corrupt or not they see it as the party that delivers subsidies to them and welfare to them.

“And the ANC is always threatening them that if they vote for the DA they will lose their social welfare grants,” said Mbeki, of the South African Institute of International Affairs.

The Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), formed by Julius Malema last year after he was thrown out of the ANC, came in third with a little over six percent of the vote, which ensures they will have a presence in parliament.

Both DA and EFF support was bolstered by a series of corruption scandals surrounding Zuma and frustration at rampant poverty and poor public services.

“There’s a strong critique of the ANC, but in terms of available other options there is a lack of trust in other parties,” said Cherrell Africa, head of politics at the University of the Western Cape.

Public Enterprises Minister Malusi Gigaba told AFP the ANC will use its fresh electoral mandate to “radically” boost black business.

“The fact of the matter is black South Africans continue to feel a sense of social injustice in terms of economic ownership patterns as well as the ownership of the land,” said the ANC number three, who is tipped to head the party one day.

“We need to implement programmes that are going radically to change that.”

Free and fair polls

A record 25 million voters registered for the elections, with the electoral commission giving a provisional turnout figure of 73.26%.

The African Union observer mission congratulated the country on “free, fair, transparent and credible” polls.

Pansy Tlakula, chairperson of the Independent Election Commission, said a number of complaints were being investigated, but would not affect the polls’ credibility.-Sapa

Army deployed in Alexandra


Pretoria – The army has been called in to quell a violent protest in Alexandra, north of Johannesburg, Gauteng Premier Nomvula Mokonyane said on Friday.
“The provincial police commissioner [Lieutenant General Joel Mothiba] has informed me that people in Alexandra have been attacking buildings and assaulting others… the army is moving as we speak,” Mokonyane said on the sidelines of the Independent Electoral Commission of SA (IEC) results centre.

ANC spokesperson Keith Khoza said the party was informed that the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) had been bussing in people into Alexandra to fuel the protests.

“A certain political party, which took part in this elections, is bringing people into the township, we do not condone violence and destruction of property,” he said.

The protesters demanded the release of those arrested during a protest on Thursday, he said.

EFF Gauteng leader Dali Mpofu denied that his party brought in protesters into Alexandra.

“Members of the EFF, the DA and the IFP were all involved in yesterday’s hostage situation over allegations of vote rigging, the EFF sent out lawyers to deal with the situation. We do not condone violence… and of course they would single out the EFF out of all parties involved,” Mpofu said.

The IEC spokesperson Kate Bapela said the commission had heard about the protest, but had not received a complaint regarding the voting process in Alexandra.

Rubber bullet, stun grenades

Gauteng police said rubber bullets and stun grenades were fired on Friday afternoon to disperse protesting residents in Alexandra.

“Approximately 300 to 400 people gathered and burned tyres outside the court in Alexandra, protesting about the suspects arrested for public violence last night,” spokesperson Neville Malila said in a statement.

He said police instructed the group to disperse, but they refused and barricaded streets.

“Police had to use stun grenades and rubber bullets to disperse the crowd, 44 people were arrested for public violence,” Malila said.

“More police and metro police were deployed in the area to contain the situation.”

Malila said later in the afternoon that the situation had abated and that the township was quiet but tense.

There was still debris and rocks in the streets, but the roads were now open, he said. No injuries were reported.

Earlier, Malila said a room in a community centre in the township that was used by the IEC was burned by residents on Thursday night.

There were people inside the centre at the time of the fire, but no injuries were reported.

Thirty-one people were arrested for Thursday night’s fire.

Malila said the motive was unknown.

Both groups would appear in the Alexandra Magistrate’s Court on Monday.

– SAPA

ANC thanks Gauteng voters


Johannesburg – The ANC in Gauteng expressed its gratitude to voters on Friday for keeping the party in power.
By 21:00 on Friday, the ANC had secured 53.68% of the Gauteng provincial vote, with 98.64% of the province’s votes counted.

“A humble thank you to all voters in Gauteng who came out in their large numbers to exercise their democratic right and responsibility to elect a government of their choice,” spokesperson Nkenke Kekana said in a statement.

“The ANC provincial leadership is pleased with the election results and appreciates the show of continued confidence and a clear mandate for ANC to govern Gauteng.”

The win ensured that the ruling party remained in control of Gauteng, the fourth-largest economy in Africa.

“The overall tally of votes so far show that Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal each contributed about 2.5 million votes out of the 11.4 million ANC won nationally,” Kekana said.

“The ANC does not take any vote for granted.”

The national provisional results showed that the ANC had 62.18% of votes, with 99.94% of votes counted.

Kekana said the ANC in Gauteng intended to tackle all the issues that were brought to its attention during the election campaign.

– SAPA