Thursday, 17 April 2014

A vote is a deeply personal choice

 iol news pic Ronnie Kasrils suit



Former intelligence minister Ronnie Kasrils is an enemy of the people with his No Vote campaign, the Umkhonto We Sizwe Military Veterans Association (MKMVA) said.

But the call for spoiling ballots highlights poor quality of choice available to the electorate, says Imraan Buccus.

Durban - The call by Ronnie Kasrils and Nozizwe Madlala-Routledge for South Africans to either spoil their ballots or to make a tactical vote in support of one of the smaller political parties has caused quite a stir.
Kasrils and Madlala-Routledge have tapped into a general discontent about the poor quality of choices available to the electorate in the coming election.
But they have also been accused of “undermining democracy”.


Elections can be hugely important but they’re not always all they’re cracked up to be. No one who has lived under a dictatorship or entrenched corruption would dismiss the right to vote in a free and fair election as trivial.
While Emma Goldman’s observation that “If voting changed anything, they’d make it illegal” looks a little silly amid those elections in which there are real consequences for society, there are many in which it has more than a grain of truth.

Throughout the world there are many democracies where the major political parties are more or less indistinguishable from each other, especially on economic questions.
There are many countries where no party can be a serious player without massive financial backing with the result that all serious contenders for electoral office represent the super-rich. The US, the UK and India are examples of these phenomena.

Every time we go to the polls we’re subject to all kinds of mystification. We’re told that if you don’t vote you can’t complain, which is not true. Some of the most organised and effective complainers in our society are grassroots organisations that boycott elections.
We’re told that voting is a way of conveying our particular concerns upwards when in fact, unlike other forms of political activity, there’s no clear way to read the intention behind an individual vote.
One person may vote for the ANC out of support for its steady degeneration into self-serving authoritarianism. The person behind her in the queue may cast the same vote but with a heavy heart and the real sense that this is the last time she will give her support to the party if its degeneration continues. One person may vote for the DA out of racism and another in the hope of more efficient service delivery.

Democracy should never be reduced to voting and elections. Democracy is at least as much about everyday forms of contestation and organisations as it is about elections.
A free press, an independent judiciary and the right to organise and protest freely are as important for democracy as free and fair elections. But those political theorists who, like John Holloway or Alain Badiou, write off elections altogether are seriously mistaken.
In many countries, removing an authoritarian government from power via the ballot box is the only real option available. Community mobilisation of social movements is vital political work but on its 
own it cannot resolve the fundamental contradictions of our society.

We have witnessed some extraordinary popular struggles on the mines and in communities, but even the best of these have no power to, for instance, nationalise the platinum mines and redirect their profits into social projects. Only the state can do this.
The ANC is a glorious liberation movement and close to the hearts of most South Africans, but many are disillusioned with recent happenings.
The first option would be to rescue the ANC. The other dominant parties are all neo-liberal. This is also true of most of the minor parties.

The Economic Freedom Fighters is not neo-liberal but with its deeply problematic leadership, its authoritarianism and its narrow racial chauvinism, it is not a credible progressive alternative.
If Numsa’s plan to build a united front that links social movements and community struggles with trade unions is realised, and if this united front produced a political party, there may be a credible option for some in the 2019 election.

But this year’s election is a few weeks away and people have to decide what to do now. Surely the ANC can still be rescued.
How we vote or if we spoil our ballots, is a deeply personal decision. But Kasrils and Madlala-Routledge have enriched the debate about this election and how we respond to Jacob Zuma’s failed presidency.

* Imraan Buccus is a research fellow in the School of Social Sciences at the University of KwaZulu-Natal and the academic director of a university study abroad programme on political transformation.

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