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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
World
Robyn Dixon

South Africa's ruling party suffers biggest election setback since apartheid

JOHANNESBURG _The party of Nelson Mandela, South Africa's governing African National Congress, sustained its biggest election blow since the end of apartheid Saturday, as many voters in municipal elections either didn't vote or favored two black-led opposition parties.

The ANC's support remained substantial, at around 54 percent of the vote 22 years after the nation's first democratic election. But it lost to the main opposition party, the Democratic Alliance, in two major cities � Tshwane, where the seat of government, Pretoria, is located, and Nelson Mandela Bay on the south coast, where a white mayor, Athol Trollip, will govern for the DA.

The 54 percent tally was a major psychological blow for a party whose vote had never fallen below 60 percent in previous elections.

Results for the most populous city, Johannesburg, were still being counted, but the ANC was well ahead with 44 percent of the vote, against 38.7 percent for the DA.

In a sign of the ANC's shock at the losses, the governing party canceled its victory party at its election headquarters in Johannesburg Saturday, according to local media.

The result puts the spotlight on South African President Jacob Zuma, who has been criticized for passing off personal upgrades to his home as security expenses.

The ANC's support in most rural areas held up and its support in Zuma's stronghold of KwaZulu-Natal increased. But its losses in urban areas may signal that the ANC's hold over middle-class black voters and poor blacks in big urban townships may be waning.

More than two decades after the end of apartheid, growth is sluggish, and unemployment remains stubbornly high at nearly 27 percent, excluding those who have given up looking for work.

Senior ANC figures said the government would go back to its base to find out why people turned away from the party.

"Once we go back' they will say' 'Well guys' we did not vote for you because we are not happy about this,' and we will see how we change those things. That is what democracy is all about," said Paul Mashatile, chairman of the ANC in Gauteng, the most populous state.

The Democratic Alliance was white-led until last year, a barrier to its performance in elections, but a young black leader, Mmusi Maimane, 36, took over last year after the resignation of Helen Zille. Under Zille, the party consolidated and won control of Cape Town, the country's second-biggest city.

The alliance won nearly 27 percent of the vote nationally in the current municipal vote, while the radical left party, the Economic Freedom Fighter, led by Julius Malema, won just over 8 percent, according to results announced Saturday by the Independent Electoral Commission.

The Tshwane result leaves Malema as the potential kingmaker, with the Democratic Alliance forced to seek coalition partners after falling short of the majority required to rule in its own right. In Tshwane, the alliance won 43.1 percent of the votes to the ANC's 41.2 percent with the EFF gaining 11.7 percent of the vote.

Malema, who has called for nationalization of banks and government seizures of white farmland, has given conflicting signals on whether he would be willing to form a coalition with the DA or the ANC.

The DA's victory in Nelson Mandela Bay gives the party the opportunity to prove its efficiency as a government in that region, something it has tried to do in Cape Town.

During the election campaign, Maimane angered the ANC by trying to claim Mandela's mantle, saying the DA was the "only party that is carrying forward the vision and the values of Nelson Mandela."

Maimane addressed a mass rally in Port Elizabeth, the main city in the municipality.

He said the result had shattered the idea that the DA was a white party.

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