Ramaphosa Is New ANC Leader, Set to Rule South Africa
South African Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa beat Nkosazana
Dlamini-Zuma in a gripping battle for control of the ruling party, putting him
on track to become the nation’s next leader.
Ramaphosa,
65, won 2,440 votes for the ANC presidency at the party’s national elective
conference in Johannesburg, while Dlamini-Zuma, 68, secured 2,261, the
electoral agency that oversaw the vote said Monday. The outcome is a blow to
President Jacob Zuma, who backed his ex-wife to succeed him and now risks being
ousted before his second term ends in 2019.
A
lawyer, former labor-union leader and one of the wealthiest black South
Africans, Ramaphosa has pledged to revive South Africa’s stagnating economy and
clamp down on the state corruption that’s marred Zuma’s almost nine-year
tenure. He was the favored candidate of investors, business leaders, labor
unionists and the ANC’s communist party allies.
David
Mabuza was elected deputy president, beating Housing Minister Lindiwe Sisulu
with more than 300 votes. Former Secretary-General Gwede Mantashe is the new
chairman of the ANC, Free State Premier Ace Magashule was picked as the new
secretary-general, Paul Mashatile as treasurer-general and Jessie Duarte was re-elected
as deputy secretary-general.
Voters
may see the transfer of power to Ramaphosa as a break with the Zuma era, and it
should boost the ANC’s chances or retaining an overall majority in the 2019
elections, according to analysts including Daryl Glaser, a political science
professor at the University of Witwatersrand.
The rand extended gains to climb 4 percent to 12.5802 per dollar
by 7 p.m. in Johannesburg, the biggest jump in two years to the strongest level
since March. Yields on the government’s $1.25 billion of 2026 Eurobonds fell 11
basis points to 4.59 percent, a three-month low.
Support
for the party fell to an all-time low of 54 percent in last year’s municipal
elections, and it relinquished control of economic hub Johannesburg and
Pretoria, the capital, to opposition coalitions.
Ramaphosa’s ascendancy to the top ANC post caps a remarkable
comeback in a political career that looked to be over when he lost out to Thabo
Mbeki in the race to succeed Nelson Mandela as president in 1999.
He
amassed a fortune after starting an investment company and securing stakes in a
coal-mining venture with Glencore International Plc and the local McDonald’s
Corp. franchise. Ramaphosa returned to full-time politics in 2012, when he was
elected as the ANC’s deputy leader, and Zuma named him vice president in 2014.
Ramaphosa,
who has a buffalo and antelope ranch in the northern Limpopo province, will
have to take tough decisions to restore investor confidence and will confront a
number of obstacles that will make it difficult to resuscitate Africa’s
most-industrialized economy, according to Ben Payton, head of Africa Research
at Verisk Maplecroft, a Bath, England-based risk-advisory company.
“It
stretches credibility to imagine that Ramaphosa could win the ANC leadership
without striking deals with key power brokers who seek to maintain a
patronage-based political system,” Payton said in emailed comments. “The
struggle to hold the ANC together would dominate Ramaphosa’s tenure as leader
and influence all his most important policy decisions.”
From bloomberg.com
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