Yahoo – AFP,
Sibongile Khumalo, 10 May 2015
Port
Elizabeth (South Africa) (AFP) - South Africa's main opposition party, the
Democratic Alliance, on Sunday elected its first black leader, a major step in
its bid to present itself as an alternative to the ruling African National
Congress (ANC).
The DA,
which has been widely seen as a party of middle-class whites, won 22 percent of
the ballot in last year's general election and is looking to broaden its appeal
among black voters, two decades after the end of the apartheid regime.
Mmusi
Maimane, aged just 34, joined the DA in 2009 and was fast-tracked through the
ranks by Helen Zille, who stood down as party leader after eight years in
office.
Zille did
not publicly endorse Maimane, but he was the clear favourite to win the secret
ballot.
"I
don't agree with those who say that they don't see colour -- because if you
don't see that I am black then you don't see me at all," Maimane told
cheering delegates in his victory speech.
"Many
young black South Africans continue to be denied access to opportunities, just
as their parents were during apartheid -- this is what we must change if we are
going to succeed as a nation."
At the end
of his speech he paid tribute to his white wife Natalie, who joined him on
stage as he received a standing ovation.
Sunday's
vote marked "a milestone for the DA and South African politics",
according to an editorial in the Sunday Times.
"For
much of the past two decades, our political contest has been a
black-versus-white affair, with the ANC seen as the party of the previously
oppressed and the DA as a party of white interests."
Zuma
accused
Raised in
Soweto, the heartland of anti-apartheid resistance, Maimane broke away from his
family's ANC roots to join the Democratic Alliance.
Last year
he was elected the party's leader in parliament, where he has often locked
horns with ANC lawmakers and President Jacob Zuma.
The DA has
been pushing for legal action against Zuma over corruption allegations, and
Maimane vowed to succeed in this pursuit.
"Make
no mistake Mr President, you will have your day in court," he told the
racially mixed audience.
"Nobody
is above the law. And, equally so, no political party has the divine right to
rule this country."
The ANC,
which has ruled since 1994 when anti-apartheid icon Nelson Mandela became
president, and remains the dominant force in politics, faces tricky local
elections next year when the DA hopes to benefit from the government's poor
economic record and high unemployment.
But the radical leftist Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) party is also on the rise, seeking to gather votes from working-class blacks frustrated with a lack of progress under the ANC.
But the radical leftist Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) party is also on the rise, seeking to gather votes from working-class blacks frustrated with a lack of progress under the ANC.
In her
farewell speech on Saturday, Zille said the selection of a new party leader
would be "a turning point, not only for the DA but also for South
Africa".
Zille, 64,
announced last month that she would be stepping down.
"Her
resolute commitment to diversify the party's leadership, membership and support
base was one of the reasons we were able to double our votes in her eight years
as leader," Maimane told the party's annual conference in Port Elizabeth.
The DA
prides itself on liberalism and equal opportunity -- as opposed to the
affirmative action policies advocated by the ANC to overcome the legacy of the
racist apartheid era.
The party
has its roots in the now defunct Progressive Party, co-founded by the late
anti-apartheid activist Helen Suzman in 1959.



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