Dlamini-Zuma’s Dilemma. Cyril’s Challenge. The ANC’s Catch-22.

From our archives: What happens when they get there?
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Cyril Ramaphosa and Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma share a light moment during the ANC’s national policy conference held early July at the Nasrec Expo Centre.
MUNTU VILAKAZI / CITY PRESS / GALLO IMAGES

This piece was first published as a HuffPost SA special report on August 15.

Dr Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma might become ANC president. She might even be the next president of the country. Once there, however, she is likely to find that elbow room is in short supply.

"It's sad for her," says Professor William Gumede, chairperson of the Democracy Works Foundation.

"A couple of years ago she was an individual with her own life and politics. Now, by default, she has almost become a prisoner."

  • Read the second part of this project -- on Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma -- here. In part three, we profile Cyril Ramaphosa.

Gumede says Dlamini-Zuma's success is crucial to the Zuma camp -- to avoid prosecution and to hold on to the wealth acquired through the state.

He believes President Jacob Zuma's "outrageous" suggestion that the loser in the ANC leadership race should become deputy president is an indication that the Zuma camp thinks it may lose. "Zuma is only guaranteed protection [against prosecution] if he has someone in the top two," he says.

However, last week's (August 8) unsuccessful motion of no confidence has strengthened Zuma's hand, to the benefit of Dlamini-Zuma's campaign.

Gumede says the Ramaphosa camp failed to mobilise, thereby missing an opportunity that might not repeat itself. "Ramaphosa has to do things he has not done before instead of doing things the old ANC way."

Ramaphosa has to do things he has not done before instead of doing things the old ANC way.William Gumede

He expects the Zuma camp to double down by going after anti-Zuma people, also at branch level.

Independent political analyst Aubrey Matshiqi says Dlamini-Zuma's "real or perceived proximity" to Zuma is both an advantage and a disadvantage. "It is an advantage in that he enjoys the support of the dominant faction. It is a disadvantage in that Zuma is undergoing a very deep image crisis."

The same goes for the support of the dominant faction of the ANC -- the premier league, the ANC Youth League and the ANC Women's League. "It's an advantage because she might be elected ANC president as a result. But the dominant faction is undergoing a very deep image crisis. It is doing collateral damage to the party itself. [Dlamini-Zuma] may be [ANC] president in December [2017] but if the majority of voters reject the ANC in 2019, she may not become head of state."

Dlamini-Zuma's 'elemental political dilemma'

Independent political reporter Carien du Plessis, who is writing a book about Dlamini-Zuma, says public opinion -- measured by media coverage and the views of the middle-class establishment -- was favourable towards the former chairperson of the African Union Commission until fairly recently.

"[Dlamini-Zuma] was on a high in home affairs when the department got a clean audit for the first time in 16 years ... People were saying she's too valuable to lose to the [African Union]."

But when it became clear that she was latching her fortunes on to that of her former husband, sentiment started to turn. "People were saying: 'We don't know her like this. She's disappointing us ...'

"I think she's in a bit of a tough position," says Du Plessis. "I don't think she can win without [Zuma's] support because of the good networks that he has. The premier league, the rural provinces -- they have been building branches for quite a few years now and they've been lobbying people so they've built quite a solid support base, which would ... translate into support for her ... But if his fortunes turn, hers might turn as well."

Dlamini-Zuma faces an "elemental political dilemma," says Richard Calland, associate professor in the department of public law at the University of Cape Town and author of The Zuma Years. "On the one hand, she wants to govern the ANC from the centre in order to ... 'put Humpty Dumpty together again'. She can only do that by reclaiming the centre ground. However, Ramaphosa is dominant in the centre ground."

Calland sees Dlamini-Zuma's grassroots campaign as an effort to broaden her support base beyond the nationalist wing (on the right) and the "gangster wing" of the ANC. "She's going around the country, branch to branch, to try and win support that will cut across that -- so she wants to win with a support base that is as wide and diverse as possible. It remains to be seen if she will achieve that. Aside from that, she has to ensure that her slate has the muscle necessary to win but also that it's not full of folks who will try and extract a pound of flesh from her if she does win. That's a very delicate balance. I think she's working very hard on that."

What will Cyril do?

If the balance of support stays as is, the dominant faction will remain the kingmakers until the ANC's elective conference in December, which would benefit Dlamini-Zuma, says Matshiqi.

The challenge for Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa is, therefore, "to create a new majority outside the circle of kingmakers or he must succeed in dividing the circle of kingmakers so that a portion thereof hives off to support him", he says.

It is here where other candidates could influence the race -- by dividing internal constituencies in favour of either candidate. Or by asking their supporters to throw their weight behind a particular candidate.

But it might not be entirely up to the ANC. Matshiqi believes external factors, such as the economy, might force the party's hand. "In the end, the ANC may have to elect a candidate who is better placed to raise levels of confidence [in the interest of economic growth] ... Clearly, anyone who is seen to be a candidate of the dominant faction is unlikely to [do so]."

'A continuous acrimonious co-existence'

Regardless of who wins the leadership race, Matshiqi believes the winner will preside over a divided ANC. "Division might deepen further if the ANC loses power in 2019. But the divisions may come before that if there is perception by a critical mass of ANC members that if the dominant faction wins the battle in December, it may lose the war [election] in 2019."

Professor Susan Booysen of the Wits School of Governance says the ANC might not split "but I think we are past the phase where one faction just accepts the rule of the winning faction. There is going to be a continuous acrimonious and reluctant co-existence of those factions."

Says Stephen Grootes, host of The Midday Report on 702: "The [Zuma/Dlamini-Zuma/premier league] faction has to retain control of the National Prosecuting Authority to keep Zuma [and others] out of jail ... The Cyril side -- on their version -- has to fight incredibly hard because they are fighting to save nothing less than the soul of the ANC.

"How do those two reach a compromise?"

Left, right and centre

"The centre and centre-left of the ANC is one that is very much committed to the traditions of the ANC in terms of consultation, in terms of trying to find consensus within the organisation, building unity and so on," says Professor Richard Calland, author of The Zuma Years.

"Secondly, it's more of a social democrat tradition. It's a tradition that is progressive politically. It's pro-union. It's pro-government in the sense that government is the driver of the developmental state. So there are very big ideological and values differences between the centre/centre-left and what I call the right or the nationalist side of the ANC.

"I think the centre/centre-left is much more committed to the Constitution and the institutions of a constitutional democracy. The nationalists are much more about taking power and using it for a particular purpose ... There is also a respectable side to the nationalist side of the ANC. Someone like [former minister of public service and administration] Ngoako Ramatlhodi is what I call a respectable nationalist -- he's not corrupt, he's not part of the gangster part of the ANC, he hasn't been captured ...

"But he's not a social democrat. He's a capitalist. He believes in the market. He believes that government should get out of the way. Most importantly, he believes in black economic empowerment -- he wants to see economic power in the hands of more black people ... Whereas the centre/centre-left are much more interested in collective rights, in the transformation of class strata and class formations and union rights and so on, rather than the enrichment of a small number of black individuals."

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Dlamini-Zuma and President Zuma during the 2016 Women's Day celebrations in Pretoria.
Gallo Images / Lefty Shivambu

NDZ, JZ and the dominant faction

The link between Dlamini-Zuma and her former husband is undeniable, says Professor William Gumede, chairperson of the Democracy Works Foundation. "They've had a bond, a life and children together."

"I know people say it is sexist to talk about Dlamini-Zuma as Zuma's ex-wife. For me, she and Zuma are politically the same. The premier league -- and I'm not entirely convinced that the premier league is as united as it used to be -- supports him and therefore supports her." – Stephen Grootes, host of The Midday Report on 702

"[Dlamini-Zuma is] not getting involved in all these spats and all the controversies around [Zuma] ... She hasn't really said anything about the Guptas, for instance ... She just keeps on pushing her African agenda, her gender agenda ... So I think she does realise that she will have to look like she's close to [Zuma] but at the same time ... separate herself from him ..." – Carien du Plessis, independent political reporter

"I think she would want to put some clear blue water between herself and her former husband. She needs to win on the basis that ... she is definitely not going to continue the rot of the Zuma years. She is respectful and loyal to her former husband. But that is a kind of respect for the presidency of the ANC. I think she is a traditionalist in that sense. In terms of her campaign and in terms of her political stance going forward, she would want to be distinct from Zuma ... She has been similar to him in reinforcing the radical economic transformation stance." – Richard Calland, associate professor in the department of public law at the University of Cape Town

"The factions have bolted. [Dlamini-Zuma] will have the task of continuously defending her lobby group. She will depend on them." – Professor Susan Booysen of the Wits School of Governance

"She has the capability to lead but she is not necessarily in a position to take on the dominant faction [of the ANC], who will hold her to account." – Dr Sethulego Matebesi, political analyst, University of the Free State

"The rural electorate may take to [Dlamini-Zuma] fairly quickly, partly because of her association with Jacob Zuma ... The urban electorate may not warm to her, precisely because of her association with Zuma." – Dr Lubna Nadvi, lecturer in political science, University of KwaZulu-Natal

  • Since the ANC's national policy conference, the frontrunners in the ANC leadership race have used public platforms to express their views on a number of contested issues, including radical economic transformation and (white) monopoly capital. Explore the map above by clicking on the pins (green pins are for Dlamini-Zuma; yellow pins are places visited by Ramaphosa). Click through the slideshow below to compare Dlamini-Zuma's and Ramaphosa's views on key issues, based on her lecture on the Freedom Charter, delivered in Kimberley, and his address to the South African Communist Party's (SACP) national congress.
NDZ vs. CR: What they said
The economy(01 of10)
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Cyril Ramaphosa takes a selfie during the ANC national policy conference at the Nasrec Expo Centre on July 5.

Ramaphosa on the economy
The ANC policy conference has placed economic growth, jobs [and the] transformation of our economy at the centre of the policies that we need to adopt …

We know that we cannot advance transformation to any meaningful extent unless we create employment on a massive scale, particularly for the youth …

But we cannot create these jobs if the economy is not growing and the economy will not grow unless we achieve higher levels of fixed investment.

Monopoly capital and radical economic transformation
The idea, articulated in the ANC’s strategy and tactics [document], that the ANC’s approach to monopoly capital in particular and capital in general is one of ‘unity and struggle, cooperation and contestation’ is therefore not a mere theoretical construct.

And we would like the party to engage with this because that’s precisely what caused confusion at the ANC conference.

It is rooted, this whole process, in our actual experience of an economy in which wealth, power and control are concentrated in a few, mainly white, hands. It is rooted in our actual experience of seeking to stimulate growth and investment while at the same time undertaking a programme of radical economic transformation.

(credit:Images / Beeld / Deaan Vivier)
Radical economic transformation(02 of10)
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Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma interacts with residents of Hammanskraal, Gauteng, during a door-to-door visit on May 4.

Dlamini-Zuma on radical economic transformation
[The Freedom Charter] says the people shall share in the country’s wealth … But are we sharing in the country’s wealth? Can we say that [that] clause of the Freedom Charter has been fully implemented? [Members of the audience respond: ‘No’.] I agree. And the ANC agrees with you that indeed, after 20 years in our democracy, only a small percentage of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange is black-owned. The majority of our people remain excluded from the mainstream economy. This is unjust. It is not sustainable and it is a threat to our democracy. Because if you are in political power but you don’t have economic power, you cannot sustain the political power.

It is precisely for that reason that, in Mangaung, the ANC adopted the radical economic transformation. And this is not just a slogan. The president has said there needs to be fundamental change in … the way the economy is structured. In the system. In the institutions. In the patterns of ownership, management and control of the South African economy, in favour of South African people, especially the poor -- the majority of whom are black, African and women …

Our mission now is to ensure that future generations have economic freedom … We must also remember that radical economic transformation is meant to benefit all of us. It will keep the country stable, peaceful, prosperous …

White monopoly capital
At the [ANC] policy conference now this matter was debated quite a lot and we agreed that even among the white people, it’s only a small minority that monopolises the economy … In South Africa, monopoly capital is white.

(credit:Gallo Images / Sunday Times / Simphiwe Nkwali)
Nationalisation(03 of10)
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Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma addresses ANC Youth League members and students at the Durban University of Technology on April 20.

Dlamini-Zuma on nationalisation
The [ANC] policy conference also spoke about the Reserve Bank. And it said that the Reserve Bank must not be privately owned … But even internationally, most countries have taken the reserve bank, have nationalised the reserve bank. It’s not private. And of course this will create an enabling environment for the country, for the state, to create more banks to counter the monopolies in the financial sector and elsewhere …

Land redistribution
… In a recent land audit that was done by the John Langalibalele Dube Institute, it shows that … 80% of the privately owned land is owned by whites. So, we’re not saying they mustn’t own land. But we are saying: the land must come back … And this is one issue we can no longer afford to neglect ...

At the [ANC] policy conference it was agreed that we need to look at all options of how to get the land and how to get it fast. It has to be done within the law. But the law does not come from heaven -- it’s made by us.

(credit:Gallo Images / City Press / Siyanda Mayeza)
Bell Pottinger(04 of10)
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Struggle icon Winnie Madikizela-Mandela with President Jacob Zuma and Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa during the ANC’s national policy conference.

Ramaphosa on [UK PR firm] Bell Pottinger*
It is a matter of grave concern that a public relations company, comrades, from outside of our country was able to so effectively poison the political discourse in our country, in our movement, to advance their own clients’ narrow interests.

It says much about our lack of political cohesion and ideological clarity that this company, Bell Pottinger, was able to manipulate some of our own political concepts to fuel divisions and confusion amongst us.

And some amongst us were so gullible, so believing, had so much faith in slogans that were crafted in London, brought here to confuse us and they so held on to all these slogans as if they are prepared to die just for the slogans that were crafted by Bell Pottinger. It is a shame on us.

*According to the #GuptaLeaks, the firm pushed the “white monopoly capital” narrative in the interests of the Guptas and the Zumas.

(credit:Gallo Images / City Press / Muntu Vilakazi)
#GuptaLeaks(05 of10)
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Cyril Ramaphosa addresses residents of Nquthu, KwaZulu-Natal, during a visit on April 29.

Ramaphosa on the #GuptaLeaks
There is no single day, as we will all have observed as we read newspapers, that passes that we do not gain greater insight into a network of illicit relationships, of illicit contracts, deals and appointments that are designed to benefit just one family and their associates …

We cannot keep quiet. We cannot, under the weight of ever more disclosures, become numbed to what this means for the country, for our people and the national democratic revolution. We now know without any shred of uncertainty that billions of rands of public resources have been diverted into the pockets of a few. We also know that we as taxpayers in this country also paid for a lavish [Gupta] wedding that took place in Sun City … These are resources that rightly belong to the people of South Africa …

Should we remain quiet when all this happens? No, we cannot. And I am one of those who will not remain quiet ...

State capture
To many people, state capture may seem far removed from their everyday lives. Unfortunately and tragically, state capture has already had a profoundly damaging impact on our economy, on our state and on the wellbeing of our people. We need to act now to prevent any further damage …

This independent judicial inquiry must be appointed without any further delay. The house is burning. Let us appoint this judicial enquiry. But we are also saying our law enforcement agencies must act with speed and they must also act with purpose to investigate all these allegations and to bring those who are responsible to book. But more importantly, we also need to go out and recover the monies that have been stolen. Those monies must be brought back. They belong to the people of South Africa.

Because, comrades, if state capture is left unchecked, it can undermine the very foundations of our democracy. It is critical that the institutions we established in the Constitution to safeguard our democracy should hold firm …

As the alliance, we need to draw a line in the sand and say: ‘We will not allow our institutions to be used, to be captured and to be abused for the interest of just a few people …’

We need to mobilise our structures and our supporters to oppose this whole concept of state capture and corruption in whatever form it takes. We need to send a clear message, comrades, that we will not protect those within our ranks who are also involved in these activities …

(credit:Gallo Images / City Press / Siyanda Mayeza)
Corruption(06 of10)
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Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma ahead of her address on the Freedom Charter in Kimberley, Northern Cape, on July 15.

Dlamini-Zuma on corruption
We need to ensure that we have an efficient, effective, developmental and transparent state and that state must make sure that the resources at its disposal are used for a better life for our people. And that state must ensure that if there is corruption in the public sector, whether it’s at local, provincial [or] national [level], but also in the private sector, that it utilises all it has at its disposal to root out corruption.

(credit:Twitter / @DlaminiZuma)
ANC and the alliance(07 of10)
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Cyril Ramaphosa at the South African Communist Party’s national congress on July 12 in Boksburg.

Ramaphosa on the ANC and the alliance
As we have done for decades and as we continue to do, we must resist each effort to destroy this alliance. This alliance was built through blood and struggle and it must continue and continue forever …

Your congress is taking place when our movement, admittedly, is at its weakest. Our alliance is under great strain …

There is an African proverb that goes: When brothers fight to the death, a stranger inherits the home. Today our home is plagued by divisions. We all know too well some of the causes of these ructions within our house …

The diagnostic report, comrades, that was tabled by the secretary-general of the ANC, Comrade Gwede Mantashe, at the ANC policy conference -- together with other discussion documents on strategy and tactics and organisational renewal -- describe how our structures and programmes have been undermined by competition for resources, corruption and the capture of the state institutions by families, individuals and companies …

We … look to the SACP -- and to this congress -- to once again take the lead in building a cadre with the necessary analytical tools that are needed to understand the prevailing environment and the political consciousness to effect fundamental change. This is necessary because our people are watching with grave concern and they are also watching in some fear, wondering if we are still capable of leading them. They hear in our language, in our ideas, a hankering after our past victories, yet they are most concerned about the future. They want to hear how the ANC and the broader alliance will heal itself. They want to hear how we are going to revive and transform our economy and how we are going to improve their lives …

Our people do have grounds for hope and that hope has arisen after the ANC policy conference because we have now embarked as a movement and as a country on a journey of renewal … so that we seek renewal of the values, the organisational integrity and the revolutionary programme of the ANC and the alliance.

(credit:Gallo Images / The Times / Masi Losi)
ANC and the alliance(08 of10)
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Cyril Ramaphosa and Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma share a light moment during the ANC’s national policy conference held early July at the Nasrec Expo Centre.

Dlamini-Zuma on the ANC
We need a strong, united ANC and alliance … It is important to be united based on a common programme, common purpose and common actions. As we strengthen and unite the ANC, we must make sure that the values and principles of the ANC are not lost. We must emphasise the importance of organisational discipline … [The culture of having very robust, open, frank debates] must remain in the ANC … The ANC values and principles teach us that if you stand for elections and you win, you embrace everybody, including those who didn’t vote for you. And if you lose, you support the leader that has been democratically elected …

The alliance
As the ANC, we are the leader of the alliance. Therefore, it is our responsibility as much as it is the responsibility of the individual members of the alliance, to make sure that each member of the alliance is strong … But also that we improve our relationship so that the alliance is strong.

(credit:Gallo Images / City Press / Muntu Vilakazi)
SA’s challenges(09 of10)
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Cyril Ramaphosa delivers a keynote address during the official renaming ceremony of the Nelson Mandela University at the Missionvale Campus on July 19 in Port Elizabeth.

Ramaphosa on South Africa’s challenges
There is, we must admit, a lot of restlessness in our country as many of our people are pondering and asking themselves how are we going to address the many challenges that face us as a country and as a people in relation to our politics; in relation to how we manage the economy of our country, particularly when we are now in a recession. We are also pondering and wondering how are we going to address this whole question of the downgrading status that has been imposed on us. Our people are also wondering how are we going to curb what they see as rampant corruption; and, more importantly, they keep asking themselves what are we going to do to address the issue of creating jobs and ridding our country of the scourge of inequality and poverty …

(credit:Gallo Images / Die Burger / Lulama Zenzile)
SA’s challenges(10 of10)
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Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma receives a warm welcome from ANC Women’s League supporters during her arrival at the OR Tambo International Airport on March 15. Dlamini-Zuma landed from Ethiopia after her term as chairperson of the African Union Commission ended.

Dlamini-Zuma on South Africa’s challenges
We must … acknowledge that if we look, for instance, at our schools, at our townships, they are not the same. We still need to improve the infrastructure; the roads. They are not the same as the schools in white areas …

The Constitution says we are equal. Our laws [say] we are equal. But there is a challenge that we are still facing … To access experienced legal personnel … is very expensive. It means that though we are equal before the law, our access to the law is still determined by who has the means and who doesn’t …

It is clear that, though in the law we all enjoy human rights, there are still problems in enjoying those human rights, especially for women and especially for the poor …

We cannot run away from the fact that there is lots of unemployment. But let me say that we’ve made strides in providing good labour laws and protection of its workers. But there are still challenges that remain amongst the most vulnerable workers such as farm workers [and] domestic workers …

Our bottom line should be that there should be no child in this country that is denied higher education because they are poor …

It is important that the ANC ensures that the NHI [National Health Insurance] becomes a reality so that everybody can have access to proper healthcare. And we must also improve public transport.

(credit:Gallo Images / Sowetan / Masi Losi)

If the ANC race was just online, who'd be heading for Mahlamba Ndlopfu?

Campaign season in the ANC has looked decidedly different this year.

First, there was the months-early endorsement of Dr Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma by the ANC Women's League.

"The Women's League did this just before the January 8 statement. I mean that was an incredible thing to do [considering ANC rules about the succession debate]... And to almost overshadow the ANC's biggest event of the year," says Stephen Grootes, host of the Midday Report on 702.

"[ANC secretary-general] Gwede Mantashe said something into my microphone that Sunday: 'I used to be a sprinter in my youth and there is something like a false start.'"

Then came the websites, newsletters, videos and social media updates.

How do the frontrunners compare?

  • Nkosazana.com is a curious mix of bullet points and archive material. The first item on the "in the news" section dates back to 2002.
  • The three dots in ANC colours that rotate while a page is loading is the first clue that Ramaphosa.org.za is no rush job. It looks good, is easy to navigate and the content is fresh.
  • On Nkosazana.com, users can subscribe to a newsletter by only entering an email address, which is perhaps a strategy to increase the likelihood of subscription. It could also be a missed opportunity. When subscribing, the Ramaphosa campaign asks for basic details such as your province and whether you are an ANC member, which makes sense if you're building a campaign database. Then again, users might not want to part with their cell numbers, which is a required field.
  • Team Ramaphosa has put out 12 newsletters, which are also available on its website. The newsletters typically feature a Ramaphosa speech from recent years, turned into an infographic. Topics have ranged from increasing "the scale and pace of radical economic transformation" to skills development. Some newsletters include book giveaways and links to posters of icons of the struggle such as lawyer and activist Victoria Mxenge, who was assassinated outside her home in 1985. (The Nkosazana.com newsletter is yet to arrive in my inbox.)
  • Dlamini-Zuma had a reasonable head start on Twitter because she is using the account she has had since 2014 for her campaign (see graphic). Following a steady stream of tweets on her activities and speeches, her account was dead quiet for two weeks. Dlamini-Zuma's campaign tweeted again on August 7 to condemn violence against women. She commended the man who intervened when Deputy Minister Mduduzi Manana allegedly assaulted up to three women at a nightclub but did not mention the deputy minister or any of the women by name. City Press reported that one of the women, Mandisa Duma, was Dlamini-Zuma's niece. Dlamini-Zuma's account has been busy since the hiatus.
  • The Ramaphosa campaign account is updated regularly. Aside from featuring Ramaphosa's activities and speeches, it pushes the newsletter and content on its website. Late on Monday (August 14), the account responded to an allegation made by EFF leader Julius Malema that Ramaphosa had abused his first wife.
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Graphics24
  • Team NDZ is more active on YouTube. It puts out videos of some of her speeches, broken up into smaller chunks. It also posted the first in a series of "In Conversation With" Dlamini-Zuma videos. (Considering that this was presumably aimed at a young audience -- the topic was youth development -- it was a very long 27 minutes.)
  • Team Ramaphosa's channel until recently contained a mix of news clips and archive videos, featuring former ANC presidents Oliver Tambo and Nelson Mandela and former South African Communist Party leader Joe Slovo. This month (August), it introduced an animated explainer of the ANC document Through The Eye Of A Needle? Choosing The Best Cadres To Lead Transformation, and a video commemorating the 1987 mine workers' strike.
  • The Ramaphosa campaign is considerably bigger on Facebook, with 112 241 followers versus 10 202 for Dlamini-Zuma. Both campaigns' activities on Facebook are largely information focused, as opposed to a focus on engagement with followers.
  • Team Ramaphosa made its debut -- the first of 145 posts to date -- on Instagram on January 17. On the account, you'll find photos of a beaming Ramaphosa with a diverse mix of South Africans: young, old, able-bodied, people with disabilities, black and white. He is seen opening a clinic and attending religious gatherings. There is a summary of the findings of the Marikana commission and news about endorsements. There are also pictures of Ramaphosa with key players in the ANC leadership race. They include former ANC chairperson in KwaZulu-Natal Senzo Mchunu, ANC treasurer-general Zweli Mkhize, Eastern Cape chairperson Phumulo Masualle and his counterpart from Gauteng, Paul Mashatile -- who first seemed to endorse Ramaphosa but subsequently told City Press he might be a candidate for the top job himself. The account has 1 306 followers.
  • Dlamini-Zuma's account has only posted 16 times. Among the first pictures shared was of her arrival in South Africa after leaving the African Union Commission. There is her visiting Wits and Rhodes universities, covered in a blanket (there is no caption), with Comrades winner Bongumusa Mthembu and celebrating Women's Day in Kimberley. She has 722 followers.

All in all, the Ramaphosa campaign has a better website. Dlamini-Zuma's total following on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram is bigger than that of the Ramaphosa campaign. However, if the proportion of Dlamini-Zuma's fake followers on Twitter is taken into account (30% according to TwitterAudit.com versus 2% for Ramaphosa) their total followers across the three social networks are neck and neck.

The race won't be decided online as only 40% of South Africans are internet users and ANC branches have the biggest say, but the battle is certainly no longer analogue.

Does anyone else stand a chance?

The ANC's electoral system encourages a two-horse race, says Anthony Butler, professor of political studies at the University of Cape Town.

"It's partly because the whole ANC electoral system is based on trade-offs. You try to build a faction."

Butler says that while it is late in the game for a withdrawal, the Zuma camp may rethink its choice if Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma "continues to find it difficult to generate enthusiasm or credibility".

An alternative woman candidate might have been a consideration because the camp has invested a lot in the idea of a woman president. However, Butler says, a strong enough candidate doesn't come to mind.

Minister in the Presidency Jeff Radebe could be an "alternative fort holder" -- someone who serves for a single term. "But he is not a strong candidate for the 2019 elections."

Radebe also emerged as a possible candidate in a mock ballot held in Durban in February by a think-tank, the Xubera Institute for Research and Development. Two hundred participants were asked to choose between seven candidates after participating in a discussion about leadership. Radebe was placed third (24.5%), after Cyril Ramaphosa (44%) and Dlamini-Zuma (28.5%).

Participants included academics, professionals and representatives of non-governmental organisations. While they were all from KwaZulu-Natal -- a key province in the race based on numbers -- the sample was not representative of the ANC members in the province who will choose the party's next leader.

Aubrey Matshiqi, independent political analyst, says it is unlikely that a third way will open up but if that does happen and he makes himself available, ANC treasurer-general Zweli Mkhize would be a strong candidate. Stephen Grootes, host of The Midday Report on 702, also thinks Mkhize might be an option. "I think he's playing a very careful game ... He seems to be trusted by both sides."

Says Butler: "Mkhize for a long time looked like a natural successor ... He's a very effective person. But recent appearances have not suggested widespread support."

Dr Sethulego Matebesi, political analyst from the University of the Free State, thinks Human Settlements Minister Lindiwe Sisulu would be a good choice but the odds are stacked against her.

"[She's] a very formidable woman. She's been around. She knows the tradition of the ANC. But if you look at the contestation, it's not about principles, it's not about policies, it's not about who can bring what. This whole leadership battle is about who can actually guarantee that the status quo continues ..."

This whole leadership battle is about who can actually guarantee that the status quo continues.Sethulego Matebesi

Sisulu had 7% of the support in a June poll of 2 400 people, half of whom were ANC members. Ramaphosa's support was at 42.6% and that of Dlamini-Zuma was at 21.4%, according to market research company Plus 94. The remainder of support* among ANC members polled went to Baleka Mbete (3%), Mathews Phosa (2.4%) and Mkhize (2.2%).

*Close to 15% of respondents did not indicate a preference. Various names made up the remaining 6.6%.