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South Africa is expected to elect the country’s president today (Friday) after the lawmakers are sworn in as the members of the new Parliament. Lawmakers also will elect Parliament’s new speaker and deputy speaker.
As South African lawmakers will be swearing in Parliament today, prospects for electing the new president through a consensus seems to be a possibility today. What forces the lawmakers to decide fractured electoral verdict is the constitutional requirement to elect the president within 14 days after the elections.
South Africa is expected to elect the country’s president today (Friday) after the lawmakers are sworn in as the members of the new Parliament. Lawmakers also will elect Parliament’s new speaker and deputy speaker.
Parties are under pressure to conclude negotiations by Thursday to fulfill the constitutional requirement to swear in lawmakers and elect the president within 14 days of election results being declared.
The African National Congress won 40% of the national vote during the country’s highly contested election, followed by the Democratic Alliance, or DA, with just over 21% and the newly formed uMkhonto weSizwe Party with about 15% of the vote in their first-ever election.
The ANC has opted to form a national unity government that will include most political parties that contested the election instead of a straightforward coalition with a few parties. The South African Constitution says only one-third of Parliament’s 400 lawmakers need to be present for a quorum and for the vote to elect the president to proceed.
The initial negotiations have laid bare the deep divisions between South Africa’s political parties, with some already rejecting the proposed unity government while others have agreed to be part of it. The Inkatha Freedom Party, the fifth-biggest party with 3.85% of the vote, confirmed it had decided to join the national unity government that will be led by the ANC. It said it had also started negotiations to form a coalition with the ANC and the Democratic Alliance in the KwaZulu-Natal province where the MK Party got the most votes.
While the MK Party emerged as arguably the biggest winner in the elections with an impressive performance despite being formed only six months ago, it has refused to join the unity government and sought to prevent the sitting from going ahead. The Constitutional Court dismissed the party’s application to interdict the chief justice from convening the first sitting, giving a go-ahead for it to proceed. The party continues to dispute the election results, claiming widespread vote-rigging, and has said its 58 elected lawmakers will boycott the sitting. South Africa’s independent electoral commission and independent observers have declared the elections free and fair.
As the deadline to reach an agreement approached on Thursday, the rift between the second-biggest party, the Democratic Alliance, and the fourth-biggest party, Economic Freedom Fighters, appeared to be one of the main sticking points. The leftist Economic Freedom Fighters have said they will not be part of any arrangement that involves the centrist Democratic Alliance, which they accuse of being anti-Black and opposed to policies that aim to address the injustices of South Africa’s past, including black economic empowerment and land redistribution.
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The animosity between the two suggests the ANC might have to form a national unity government that does not include the EFF and the MK Party, a pattern that may also play out in coalition governments at the provincial level, where the ANC also failed to maintain a majority in several provinces.