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Promises, but still no policy

2008-12-17 08:02
line
<b>Cope President Mosiuoa Lekota is pictured here with his two deputies, Mbhazima Shilowa and Lynda Odendaal at the Cope conference in Bloemfontein. (Jerome Delay, AP)</b>

Cope President Mosiuoa Lekota is pictured here with his two deputies, Mbhazima Shilowa and Lynda Odendaal at the Cope conference in Bloemfontein. (Jerome Delay, AP)

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Bloemfontein - Everyone present at the launch of the new political party, the Congress of the People (Cope), over the weekend and on Tuesday's public holiday, was conscious of the fact that they were witnessing an historic occasion.

As the newly endorsed party leader Mosiuoa Lekota told the crowds at the Goodyear cricket stadium in the centre of the city: "When next you celebrate Reconciliation Day, you will remember that it was on this day that Cope was founded. And on every Reconciliation Day afterwards."

At the end of the three days the excited participants in their yellow T-shirts with the Cope circle-and-cross logotype had been presented with a new leadership, which was very like the old interim leadership with some surprising additions.

No clear policy details

They had been instilled with a sense of pride, and had been exalted by high-octane rhetoric. But they did not yet have any very clear policy details to take back home.

Much of the policy-making has plainly yet to be done and what the high- flown commissions, which were supposed to be hammering out policy formulations, came up with were mostly wish-lists of what still needs to be decided.

Sam Shilowa, the newly confirmed first deputy president of the party, was unable to tell I-Net Bridge what the party's attitude towards inflation targeting was likely to be, as he had not attended the presentation of the policy commission to the conference.

He did let slip at a media conference however that the detailed policy making will be done by the new executive.

The delegates themselves sang a great deal, which seemed to take their minds off the nitty-gritty of politics, and they danced. One dance which involved jumping into the air and landing heavily on both feet began to threaten the structure of the raised tiers of seats and was discouraged.

Also formally discouraged was the singing of songs mocking the ANC and its leadership - such as one which declared that Cope was not a shower, a reference no doubt to Zapiro's cartoon image of the ANC leader Jacob Zuma forever portrayed with a shower protruding from the top of his head.

Young, black, middle-class

The party members in the Carrie Human hall of the University of the Free State were mainly young, and overwhelmingly black. They were middle-class, with high aspirations for themselves and their children.

"Oh yes," one told me. "I know I-Net Bridge. I was trader a little while ago."

Evident among them however were a number of old political war-horses still in search of a party that would finally suit them, and perhaps more to the point tolerate their vagaries.

Former mayor of Cape Town and premier of the Western Cape, Peter Marais was in the hall, but was not among the leaders gathered on the platform.

Allan Boesak, however, formerly convicted of robbing Scandinavian charities of funds given to his foundation, gave perhaps the most exciting example of oratory on offer.

It was plain why in the UDF and the ANC he had been able to hold audiences in the palm of his hand. He had Cope delegates standing on their chairs, chanting in unison: "There has never been a time like this!"

On the same day Lekota made something of a meal of insisting that a man charged with corruption should not be allowed to hold political office. He said that in Europe such a thing could not happen, until a German correspondent reminded him that Chancellor Helmut Kohl was indeed at one time in that position.

Lynda Odendaal

But among the new leadership of the party were a number of figures that could not be tarred with this brush. The new second deputy president of the party, for example, has never been a politician before.

She was a backroom IT expert who helped put together the party's website, and who now insists that she is not afraid speaking her mind.

She has been chief executive of her own IT company, and was so good at it that Nedbank made her an offer to head up their IT section.

Her husband Andre will now take the strain as chief executive, since her political job will be full-time. She has three children of her own and a stepson of 25.

Shilowa pointed out that though the ANC has insisted that half of their leadership must be women, there are four women among the six top leaders of Cope.

Only one has had any serious political profile before, and that is Charlotte Lobe, a former MP endorsed by the conference as secretary general.

Her deputy is a little known figure from KwaZulu Natal, Deirdre Carter, and the treasurer general is a black empowerment consultant who says she gave up politics ten years ago, Hilda Ndude.

Persecution complex

The persecution complex that the new party suffers from was less in evidence at the end of the conference at the beginning.

While Lekota devoted more than half of his opening speech to "ANC-gevaar", and showed genuine concern that he has been the target of assassination plans, the two rival rallies of the MK veterans - addressed by Jacob Zuma - and the Cope rally passed off without incident.

Philip Dexter, Cope's communications chief, did say that they had wanted to hold their rally in Botshabelo, but were told that it had already been booked.

The big question now is how successful can the new party be at the forthcoming elections.

If the ANC continues to implode in the way it has been doing in KwaZulu-Natal and the Western Cape and some other provinces, it will probably do very well indeed.

The Democratic Alliance insists that it is not threatened by Cope, and perhaps it isn't, but even if the DA hoovered up every non-black vote in the country, it still could not form a national government.

Plainly the way forward for both parties is to ally.

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