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As South Africans approached their elections earlier this year, many were apprehensive about the favours that were owed by the then presumptive President Jacob Zuma to the left wing of the ANC, Cosatu, the SA Communist party and the ANC Youth League.

Indeed analysts and political observers expressed concerns that the President would land up as some sort of puppet, unable to move for the political capital owed and too afraid to swim upstream with the corruption charges lurking.

Moreover these fears were heightened when labour decided to flex its muscles with wave after wave of crippling strikes before the ink on Zuma’s inauguration documentation had even begun to dry.

Over the past few months however we have witnessed anything but the scenarios envisaged above.

Instead of trying to deflect the issue on corruption Zuma has met it head on, all the while surrounding himself with a ring of steel comprising his appointments in key positions. As director of the NDPP he placed Menzi Simelane, Mo Shaik as spy boss and Bheki Cele as National Police Commissioner. Zuma loyalists to a man.

As such it is going to be interesting to see what joy Democratic Alliance leader Helen Zille has in respect of first removing Simelane and then reinstating the charges against Zuma.

Zuma as a puppet of the left is an even bigger eye-opener.

It seems as if everyone had overlooked the fact that the ANC NEC is all powerful in controlling the affairs of the party, the government and even the President.

The recalling of former President Thabo Mbeki should have alerted everyone to this and further that in terms of party politics the body has no equal. In Mbeli’s defence the policies that he, as President, is supposed to have instituted without resorting to the collective are non-existent. Accordingly to blame the Aids policies on him alone must be seen in that light.

In the case of Zuma their strength is there for all to see.

When the SACP special conference appeared to be used an opportunity to signal the alliance partners displeasure at the way in which the ANC was failing to meet them halfway on economic policy, deployment and equal say in how it runs its affairs, the NEC met and signalled their intent to clamp down on those whose dissent was out of order.

They confirmed that Cronin and Malema would be called in and disciplined but the SACP had best explain why the comrades had been booing their delegation at Polokwane. They also confirmed that they would not tolerate those who openly defy the ANC.

All the while the ANC Youth League and Malema were going straight for the throat of the SACP.

The result?

One by one the leaders of Cosatu, the YCL and the SACP have either come out and condemned the booing at the SACP conference or toned the rhetoric right down.

Young Communist League leader Buti Manamela denied that the South African Communist Party is trying to take over the African National Congress and confirmed that while the alliance partners may try to influence one another it was the ANC who are the boss.
Congress of SA Trade Unions (Cosatu) general secretary Zwelinzima Vavi said there is no crisis in the tripartite alliance, only a problem with personalities. He also condemned the booing while expressing regret at the personalised spats between members of the ANCYL, the Young Communist League and the SACP.

Yesterday, SACP deputy general secretary Jeremy Cronin confirmed that they were “ready and keen” to meet with the ANC - which will take place early in the new year.

Accordingly from raging strikes and open defiance we are now witnessing the ANC demonstrating that it has the capability and the will to reign in those who believe that they can reign in elements of the alliance if called upon to do so.

It also shows that the ANC will not allow the President that it elected at Polokwane to become anybody’s puppet and should parties wish to engage them on issues it must be done in an orderly fashion without threats.

That is good news for the country.




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7 Responses to “Zuma is nobody’s puppet”

On the seventh paragragh, Traps goes to say:

“Zuma as a puppet of the left is an even bigger eye-opener.”

Then, on the sixth paragraph, the same Traps spews:

“It also shows that the ANC will not allow the President that it elected at Polokwane to become anybody’s puppet…”

* rolls eyes & nods head *

What’s your point Traps? surely you cant have it all. Zuma cant be a puppet when you feel like calling him so, and then you feel like condoning those who wanna make him a puppet, you say, Hey, you all, Zuma’s not your puppet!

(Report abuse)

Siphiwo Siphiwo on December 18th, 2009 at 12:43 pm

Sipho - Please try to understand the articles you read.

I can’t do another article to explain an article.

From the above you clearly don’t understand this one.

(Report abuse)

Michael Trapido on December 18th, 2009 at 1:42 pm

Traps

Of course Zuma’s strings are being pulled - who paid for the massive PR/Brand building campaign since 2005?

But I suspect that the the puppet master is Mandela!

Who else had the contacts to raise the funds and contacts?

Who else was opposed to Mbeki on AIDS?

(Report abuse)

Lyndall Beddy on December 18th, 2009 at 4:17 pm

Good piece Traps. I do think that holding an alliance together is a delicate act. Zuma is fortunate to have a person like Mantashe as a GS of the ANC. If you trace back, since 1990, ANC has not had such a visible and vocal SG as Mantashe as they were operating under a shadow of the President of the ANC or always being upstaged by alliance partners. I do think that ANC can only grow stronger from this current setup. However their major challenge is building viable branches that are functional and not the current ones which are in reality ineffectual, except of course those that are led by those chairpersons who are active either in the SACP or COSATU.

(Report abuse)

Nhlanhla Ngubane on December 18th, 2009 at 4:50 pm

Traps, I do think Barney Mthombothi in this week’s Fin Mail has, in this instance, a better grasp of this matter than you have:

“Those who thought Mbeki was the source of the strife within the brotherhood are mistaken. It was never about Mbeki. It won’t be about Jacob Zuma either. The infighting will be worse under Zuma. He doesn’t have the cunning, dexterity and yes, the backbone, of his predecessor. His only weapon is a smile. But being nice can take you only so far. Thereafter it becomes a liability. Anyway, Zuma was elected not to lead, but to obey.”

(Report abuse)

Joel on December 19th, 2009 at 1:28 am

J. Zuma said before the election that he had no thoughts about running the government but, to do what the party tells him to do. All of the decisions are made by the party for the president to follow. President Zuma is right because he is not elected by the people and doesn’t have a mandate from the people. In the US the president is elected by the people and have certain powers given to his office. He can veto a bill passed by congress but they can override him with a certain amount of votes. J. Zuma understands his role and he is playing it very well. On the other hand President Mbeki was trying to act like he was directly elected to the president and he wasn’t. In 1994, the ANC set this government up in such a way that a strong man like Mugabe could not take over and rule the country for life. That means the president office in SA is a weak office with very little power.

(Report abuse)

fergie on December 20th, 2009 at 12:58 am

No Zuma is not a puppet, he is a NODDY. Always nodding his head in agreement with anything anyone says. He was interviewed by Redi Direko on 702 and managed to make many utterances without actually making a decision. He traipes around the country nodding his head in agreement with everyone and every organisation he comes in contact with, often being very contradictory, as in his assurance to the farmers their land is safe, then tells a rural village they will get the land, and finally totally ignores the issue of 3000 or more farmers and their family members murdered in the last 15 years. Then assures the business comunity the ANC is committed to them, and a day later tells the workers things will change in the business community. He is not scared to speak his mind, he is not allowed to. He is a slave to the NEC, not a president of a country, and we deserve better.

(Report abuse)

Beerboep on December 21st, 2009 at 8:20 am

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Mike Trapido is editor of NewsTime

By trade a criminal attorney he is now a full time editor and journalist.

He was born in Johannesburg and attended HA Jack and Highlands North High Schools.

He married Robyn in 1984 (Mrs Traps, aka "the government") and has three sons (who all look suspiciously like her ex-boss).

He was a counsellor on the JCCI for a year around 1992.

His passions include Derby County, Blue Bulls, Orlando Pirates, Proteas and Springboks.

He takes Valium in order to cope with Bafana Bafana's results.

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