Middle East & Africa | Elections in the rainbow nation

The failing ANC is rejected by over half of South Africa

The country now faces its biggest test since the end of apartheid

A worker removes a campaign banner of South African president Cyril Ramaphosa after an African National Congress (ANC) e
Photograph: Reuters
|CAPE TOWN

THE AFRICAN NATIONAL CONGRESS (ANC)—the continent’s oldest liberation movement, the spearhead of resistance to apartheid and the governing party since 1994—is no longer a hegemonic force in South Africa’s politics. Though the results of elections held on May 29th will not be finalised for a day or two, early projections suggest that the ANC has taken a beating. The party is set to win about 42% of the national vote, according to psephologists from News24, a local outlet, a precipitous fall from the 57.5% it won at the previous elections in 2019. Cyril Ramaphosa will be the first ANC leader without a parliamentary majority. Unlike his hero, Nelson Mandela, who magnanimously opted to govern in a coalition during the first three years of multi-racial democracy, the South African president will have no choice but to cut a deal to keep his party in power.

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