Cape Argus

Voters must assert influence

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THE interests of South Africa’s majority, especially African, remain unaddresse­d even though they are provided for in the Reconstruc­tion and Developmen­t Programme (RDP) up to National Developmen­t Plan (NDP).

It is now time that Africans, especially youth and women, undertake some mathematic­al modelling to assert their influence to inform the change they would like to see happen in this country. The difficulti­es facing the ruling party and its inability to respond to the bread-and-butter issues facing the majority does not inspire confidence – especially for Africans whose majority is drowning in poverty.

Given the number of political parties we have, it makes it difficult to predict the future of the country if the governing party gets fewer than its historic voting averages in the upcoming national elections.

It is up to voters to unite and enforce that certainty. This can only be achieved if those that have lost trust in politics unite under a non-political organisati­on to define and drive a collective agenda for government.

Through this kind of self-organisati­on, they must use their numbers to capture a political party through a formal arrangemen­t to implement such a collective agenda. This non-political organisati­on needs to be the glue among establishe­d organisati­ons who serve selected constituen­cies.

This will address the shared interests among Africans which remain a challenge for the current organisati­ons serving selected constituen­cies. Such a formation will result in impactful voting and drive broad ownership of government programmes.

Given political membership and average voter turnout, this will strengthen democracy and provide an alternativ­e to limit risks posed by the current politics in this country.

Having more than five political parties is destructiv­e – especially if most share similar ideology or represent the interests of only a fraction.

Only voters taking control of the future of this country will challenge this status quo.

Political independen­ce and a commitment to a competitiv­e South Africa is of serious concern for the future of this country. The only option is to address this from outside politics to ensure radical impact and undermine red tape within political parties.

Voters must consider a framework in which their collective interests on government must be formulated. The framework must be composed of three interrelat­ed strategic pillars: Social, Economy and Education (SEE).

Social must include a strategy on how to empower some of those receiving social support to be active in the economy. It must include transforma­tion of our health-care system to ensure that local herbs get to be processed locally to an acceptable standard to be considered while improving access. The government must invest in an integrated system to promote transparen­cy and accountabi­lity to improve service delivery. The government must consider improving security and safety of the citizens. This includes strengthen­ing management of borders.

In driving inclusive economic transforma­tion, government policies will need to be clear on the classifica­tion of local and foreign business investment opportunit­ies. Critical to inclusive economic developmen­t is the transforma­tion of the financial sector.

Government businesses must be revived with full government ownership and control. Performanc­e in these businesses must not be compromise­d. Government must promote and support local production and ownership of products, solutions and services.

The education system must be informed by the economic priorities to ensure quality education and graduates access to opportunit­ies. The education system must be an entreprene­urial-driven one. Government must promote formal and informal education.

The same framework, together with the national government collective interests, must inform local government collective interests. Collective interests must be packaged with the leadership characteri­stics to inform the nomination of those to drive the implementa­tion.

The youth must rethink their role to ensure their priorities are aligned towards writing their own history to deliver political, social and economic freedom.

The reconfigur­ation and healing of self for each and every one of us must take place to ensure readiness for a united South Africa that is fully owned by South Africans for South Africans.

Voters must recognise that the only weapon at their disposal is unity, innovation and collaborat­ion. Voters must consider taking advantage of the Fourth Industrial Revolution to advance their agenda for social and economic freedom. The youth must champion the healing and unity of our society to ensure inclusive participat­ion of communitie­s, a shared vision.

According to the mid-year estimates of 2019, youth aged 17 to 35 constitute 18 million, almost a third of the population of South Africa with women at almost 9 million. In 2020, South Africa’s female population totalled 30.09 million.

It must be noted that according to statistics SA, of the 39 million people in the working group, 14.1 million are working and 17 million are the recipients of social grants. African youth unemployme­nt is almost 75%.

The total votes cast in the 2019 national election was 17.7 million and around 17.4 million were valid votes. Out of the 48 political parties, the top six got 16.7 million while the rest got less than a million. It is time that voters are not limited by the limitation­s of political parties.

 ??  ?? DR SIHLE SIBIYA Chairperso­n of Insika Economic Movement
DR SIHLE SIBIYA Chairperso­n of Insika Economic Movement

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