Making my choice

It is in fact the most difficult thing to choose the party with which one will associate; indeed it is a choice that most have not had to make, given that most of the politicians in South Africa were either born into their parties, or they were recruited at a young age, or they climbed on the bandwagon of their party’s success as it went past; or they are now leaders of their party.

Having, over the last decade, made no secret of my public spats with every political party in South Africa, and of my alienation of my friends, family and community in the name of my crusade for justice, honesty and ethical leadership from my community’s leadership, it is perhaps the political parties which need to draw straws to see who gets the short straw, and thus the burden of my membership.

It is, I suppose, a little bizarre that as a politician you are expected to work 18 hours a day, but you are not expected to work on things which may compromise the ability of your party to do its business, to make money or to secure gains of any sort. Indeed, why would any party-bound politician seek to undermine the potential success of their own party, given that this would undermine his or her career potential?

For instance if you were an ANC politician, would you keep silent? In the face of Chancellor House (and all of the similar stories), in the face of the Ancyl, Sasco, BMF, SACP and Cosatu bullying the ANC at every turn, in the face of glaring irregularities in the way that our government conducts its business? Surely as a representative of the people, these are things to which you should object?

Therefore I have decided to make my choice of political party in public, and then to simply seize control of my chosen party to ensure that when I contest the seat of Ward 23 on the eThekwini (Durban) City Council, in 2011, that my party neither brings me into disrepute with my people, being the people of Durban, nor that my party causes me to compromise me principles.

We have therefore the following “Big 6″ contenders, for the honour of being the party that holds my membership:

ANC

DA

COPE

IFP

ACDPID

Over the next two weeks I am going to review each of these parties and their technical and operational infrastructure and report to you as to my opinions thereon.

Then I will hold a referendum for my constituents and make my case in respect of each of these parties, and then I will let the people choose. For all I know they may choose another party, and given that my ward voted NNP in 1996 and that same councillor is still in office, my constituents may choose the Minority Front.

This is assuming that I will be able to win control of any and every political party with the research and technologies which my firm owns, or that I am able to start a new political party on the basis of recruiting people who are disillusioned with the other options and who want:

  • Corruption Free Politics
  • Active and Permanently Accessible Civic Participation
  • Efficient Local Government Service Delivery based on Citizen Satisfaction

As these are the things with which I am proud to be associated. Thankfully, my tailor cuts my coat to suit, and my tails (while worn with top hat) provide little room for vendors selling tickets for the Gravy (karri – Tamil; curry – Anglo-Tamil) Train.

9 Responses to “Making my choice”

  1. avishkar #

    my apologies the images are from http://www.machete.co.za and they were supposed to be links to that page

    November 16, 2009 at 9:17 am
  2. ” my alienation of my friends, family and community in the name of my crusade for justice, honesty and ethical leadership from my community’s leadership, ”
    Been there and done that and still carry the condemnation.
    I was true to my beliefs and jumped from the frying pan into the fire.

    I did not realise that one cross, one time, would give me virulent racism and tyranny of history repeating itself. My TV screen is proof of de ja vu.
    Except that now : I am told that I am not a South African.

    I look forward to your assessments; more so the responses !

    November 16, 2009 at 10:48 am
  3. Jabba #

    You’re making your life unnecessarily difficult and complicated. No currently existing party will ever satisfy you entirely; they all have some fundamental faults and strengths, especially in our pre-realignment political environment. Just choose the one whose ideology and identity appeals the most to you and support them critically.

    If you want to avoid the realities of practical politics, then contest as an independent.

    November 16, 2009 at 12:20 pm
  4. Paul Young #

    Perhaps you need to start your own party, there is no political party in SA (probably in the world) that will live up to your exacting standards. You can count on my vote and I will gladly offer my services in the pursuit of your utopia.

    November 16, 2009 at 12:47 pm
  5. Jeff #

    It’s alright being an idealist, unfortunately it has nothing to do with politics. Otherwise communism would have been a fantastic success.
    Bring a little pragmatism into your life otherwise you are doomed to a life of disappointment, possibly even clinical depression.
    The world just is, fella, it couldn’t care less about you or your ideals.
    I agree 100% with Jabba. I stick to supporting the DA, they are the closest to my own political ideas. Perfect political parties. May as well believe in God and Heaven for all the joy you will get.

    November 16, 2009 at 7:27 pm
  6. What’s your point…form your own party at once and stop daydreaming

    November 18, 2009 at 8:56 am
  7. avishkar #

    ha… i choose the anc… i went to my first branch meeting as a member and it was awesome :-) much better than the da, ifp, cope, id and acdp…now its just a matter of ensuring that the anc big wigs dont do stupid things that make me look like im compromising my principles…

    November 19, 2009 at 12:24 am
  8. Jabba #

    I thought you were wanting a party that emobodies:

    • Corruption Free Politics
    • Active and Permanently Accessible Civic Participation
    • Efficient Local Government Service Delivery based on Citizen Satisfaction

    I must have missed the memo notifying the public of the ANC’s Damascene conversion from the Dark Side. All I can think to say is ‘good luck’. One is almost tempted to think you may need a benediction prayer too. You know, just in case…

    November 19, 2009 at 12:04 pm
  9. avishkar #

    …”This is assuming that I will be able to win control of any and every political party with the research and technologies which my firm owns”…

    November 19, 2009 at 9:02 pm

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