Download ~ Closer Look at South Africa's Transition. ~ by Harvard International Review ~ eBook PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: Closer Look at South Africa's Transition.
- Author : Harvard International Review
- Release Date : January 22, 1998
- Genre: Business & Personal Finance,Books,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 231 KB
Description
The Winter 1997/98 edition of the Harvard International Review included an article by former South African President F.W. de Klerk, who presented many thought-provoking perspectives on South Africa. Many of the views of the former National Party (NP) leader merit a reply. First, his characterization of the African National Congress (ANC) as a governing political party deserves attention. Also, the idea of Thabo Mbeki as a successor to President Nelson Mandela and the National Party's potential to become a majority party in South Africa should be discussed further. Finally, the place of disaffected voters in South Africa's future political party alignment is an important issue that must be addressed. While de Klerk's commentary about the smoothness of the current transition to majority rule reflects the present state of affairs in the country, de Klerk did not fully acknowledge the many achievements of the ANC. During the NP's 1994 campaign, in which it competed for parliamentary seats in the first universal franchise election in South African history, the NP asserted that the ANC had no capacity to govern the country. In a well-developed campaign theme, the NP warned that the ANC was no more than a liberation movement. They argued that the ANC leaders had neither the experience base nor the skills to lead the country smoothly through transition, and that the ANC lacked the ability to carry out the day-to-day governing responsibilities of a country with a US$120 billion economy. Certainly, this campaign theme succeeded in wooing some black voters in Gauteng Province to the National Party, as well as in reinforcing the decision of some colored (mixed race) voters in the Western Cape to "throw their lot in with the Nats." But, if the past four years have shown one thing with great clarity, it is the error of the NP assertion that the ANC lacked governing capabilities. In contrast to the economic and social dissension that could have occurred following the transition to majority rule, the absence of a high degree of instability is striking.
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