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Date
: 15/12/2006
Source: COSATU
Title: Zwelinzima Vavi's address to the Young Communist League
National Congress
Young Communist League National Congress addressed by the General
Secretary of Cosatu Zwelinzima Vavi
Comrades and distinguished guests;
I am honoured to stand in front of you for the second time to
address your esteemed Congress. Revolutionary greetings from the
mighty workers' federation - the Congress of South African Trade
Unions, COSATU.
Recently the Federation hosted its successful 9th National Congress
and we are grateful for your participation and contribution. We
emerged from our congress determined to pursue the National
Democratic Revolution (NDR) to its logical conclusion. The
organised workers of this country have spoken in their parliament.
They demand more radical changes in society, based on the Freedom
Charter and the noble goals of our revolution. For them democracy
is meaningless if millions remain trapped in poverty and
unemployment amidst plenty for a few. They have decided to firmly
put the struggle for socialism on the agenda.
COSATU's congress has once again confirmed the historical strategic
perspective of the NDR - that freedom without addressing the social
conditions of our people - is hollow. Ours is a revolutionary
struggle to change the material basis of colonialism, racism,
patriarchy and class exploitation.
Today, some are content to celebrate the national flag and
opportunities for upward mobility offered to a few by the new
dispensation. They mistake these symbolic and material comforts for
the actual victory of the NDR. Without doubt our revolution has
entered a qualitatively different era, but it is far from
over.
For as long as there are black people who go hungry there will be
cause to fight for social justice. For as long as there are
children who cannot access decent education the struggle will
remain relevant. For as long as women suffer under the yoke of
gender oppression, racism and capitalist exploitation there is more
reason to pursue the struggle with vigour. For as long as there is
a worker without decent job and a living wage we have a struggle to
pursue.
In short comrades it's not yet uhuru, we still have a long hard
road to travel! We can spend an inordinate amount of time in
theoretical debate about whether the NDR is capitalist or socialist
oriented. The basic truth is that we are far from realising the
radical change envisaged by the Freedom Charter and several
strategic perspectives of our democratic movement.
We may have gained political freedom yet economic power is firmly
in the hands of a white minority. Poverty, joblessness and
inequality are still confined to the black people.
Daily we are informed of a sustained economic boom. We are told
that the growth is propelled by a huge demand, including for
credit. The Governor has increased interest rates four times this
year and we are told there will be more. We are told this is a
logical response to dampen this demand. We are told that this is a
season of hope. This is a world as it exists in the minds of the
elite. They have a consensus that things are going well. You can't
blame them if you visit their houses and see the cars they drive -
indeed things are going well in their small planet.
Contrast this with the world you are coming from. It's a picture of
complete hopelessness. Unemployment is hovering at just below 40%.
The latest figure from the last quarter indicates a 2,7% growth of
job opportunities, translating to 73 000 new jobs. This is far too
low and will not help us to reach even the modest objective of
cutting unemployment by half in 2014. Unemployment discriminates
according to gender, race, and age and has an urban and rural
divide. Of the unemployed over 70% are under the age of 35 - mostly
African women and rural areas fare worse in comparison to urban
areas.
Stats show that two out of every three Africans under 35 years are
unemployed. This is a ticking bomb - another 1976 waiting to
happen. Casualisation of labour is happening at an alarming rate.
We face a real danger that soon we may kiss goodbye all the current
more secure jobs. These are being replaced by atypical forms of
employment that offer no job security or benefits and very low
wages. Again this phenomenon afflicts more the youth and
women.
Income inequality is also high and growing. Yet inequalities have
long been identified as one of the key impediments to faster
economic growth. These inequalities have both national and class
dimensions. There is realignment that is propelled by this
situation. Class contradictions are on the rise and they have
affected the Alliance. The national question is slowly taking a
backseat.
Class contradictions are moving to the fore. One of the measures of
these inequalities is the fact that the workers' share in the
national income has been on the decline since 1981 and has
continued to decline in the first 12 years of democracy. The share
of profits continues to increase. According to the Labour Force
Survey figures 16.7% of all officially employed people in South
Africa earn less than R500 a month, 34.3% earn under R1000 a month
and a total of 60% of all workers earn less than R2500 a month.
Many of these workers are sole income earners in their
households.
Poverty remains the reality for between 40% - 50% of the
population. There is a debate on whether poverty has decreased but
there is no doubt that poverty remains extremely high.
This is the reality for the many. This did not have to be, and
neither was it inevitable. So when the other side talk of an
economic boom and a relentless expenditure and therefore accepting
the logic of interest rates hikes, we ask a question - what are
they talking about? Equally when we march in the streets, from the
luxury of their 4X4s they get irritated and convince themselves
that we are mad.
We know that 300 years of colonial legacy cannot be rooted out in
12 years. But only those from the other planet I have referred to
would argue that what is taking place in South Africa is entirely
in line with the NDR, as historically conceived by the liberation
movement.
The ANC's 1969 Morogoro Strategy warned against the danger of
superficial change. The question this congress should answer is
whether as a movement we have not betrayed those who gathered in
1955 to draft the Freedom Charter and those who gathered in 1969 in
Morogoro to draft the Strategy and Tactics document? In the paper
we drafted to stimulate debates before the COSATU congress we asked
some pertinent questions:
Has democracy failed the workers and the poor?
Have we reached a tipping point where the post apartheid state
could be defined as one acting on behalf of the affluent in our
society?
How do we account for the sharp differences in the perspectives
about the economy and our society as if we were coming from
different planets?
What is the weight of the working class politically in South Africa
and how has this allowed for the apparent pro-capitalist
bias?
What steps do we need to take to assert working-class power that is
proactive in determining a readjustment of resources in our
society?
Finally what is the value of our democracy to the working
class?
At COSATU we tried to make sense of what could have been factors
leading to our NDR producing this order.
I want to offer few points as principal suspects - again there is
nothing new in what I am going to raise. We have already raised
this in our Possibilities for fundamental social change discussion
document.
Firstly political power is concentrate in too few hands. The
Alliance is not the political centre that drives transformation and
deployment of cadres. It is the presidency that does that. We have
under-estimated the power of patronage. The ANC, outside the
periodic influence of the deployment of cadres and through
development of policy in national conferences, national general
councils and policy conference, is itself largely sidelined. Most
of the important policy arises from state and the conservative
economics from the universities or even overseas.
ASGISA is a typical example of this. The ANC has no 'independent'
instrument to effectively monitor compliance of government, with
policy directives of its constitutional structures or to monitor
effectively progress. This has led to a situation where those in
the executive basically monitor their own performance and defend
their shifts.
Second, we did not properly analyse the power of capital. We accept
deracialisation of the economy. What we did not anticipate is that
this would unleash unbelievable levels of crass materialism and
careerism that have combined to kill some of the best and finest
traditions of our movement such as solidarity and
selflessness.
As we have said so often these days, leaders are not standing at
the back of the queue for the masses to feed themselves first, they
push themselves to the front and actually take the food out the
mouths of the poor, as the Gautrain debacle shows. When we raise
this we are called racists by the very fellows whose mouths are
full.
Third, we have a referee state that only sees its role as a
mediator between workers and capital during intense class battles.
In the survey we conducted in November last year, most workers
perceive that the state is intervening more in favour of business,
using law and order as an instrument.
Fourth, in the absence of a coherent development strategy directed
toward changing apartheid accumulation patterns, restoring
profitability of South African capitalism and fostering BEE have
become the overriding imperatives.
Fifth, the state has redistributed from whites to blacks through a
combination of social grants and the extension of basic serves.
These interventions play an important role in social development
and constitute a barrier between a decent life and destitution.
However, poverty eradication is conceived more as a deduction from
growth rather than a central part of economic development.
ASGISA does not define poverty as a key constraint to growth and it
continues to perpetuate the idea of poverty eradication as a
trickle down from growth under the new terminology of "leverage of
the second economy by the first economy", which means the whole
social development agenda is dependant on growth, with the inherent
risk that the model will collapse if growth falters and there is no
structural change to ownership or distribution of growth or
development.
Sixth, public-sector restructuring has resulted in power shifting
to managers. Managerialism limits interference by politicians and
collectivism in the name of achieving efficiency. In this context,
who wields power between politicians and managers becomes a highly
contested issue.
Seventh, democratic processes are either by-passed or totally
ignored. Parliament has largely been subordinated to the executive
and NEDLAC is being weakened. Some major policies are no longer
referred to NEDLAC. If this trend continues NEDLAC itself will be
reduced to a spectator.
Eighth, the State institutions have been deployed very effectively
to impose a particular hegemony. The SABC and the rest of the
bourgeoisie's media are powerful instruments that are used to
parrot the capitalists' and their shop stewards' propaganda. The
capitalists' myths are repeated so often that they settle as the
truth in minds of many. If you contradict them you get isolated,
ridiculed and labelled 'populists'. In this age very few dare raise
their voices and contradict the status quo. I won't say anything
about NPA and other state institutions because I have heard you
talking about them over and over again.
Ninth, floor-crossing legislation fosters a new culture where
individuals position themselves to serve their own interests
instead of serving the people.
Tenth, the PR system also undermines independent thought, as
individual careers depend on those in party leadership and the
deployment committee. This inevitably leads to a situation where
deployees lick the boots of the leaders rather than serve the
movement.
Eleventh, political party funding and chequebook politics can
subvert the will of the people exercised through the right to
vote.
What do we do about this situation? What is the challenge facing
this congress and the congress of the SACP in 2007? Must we abandon
the struggle and give up on the dream of millions for a better life
for all? Must we abandon the ANC and throw the towel and admit that
it has been hijacked by the 1996 class project and all we must do
is to break the Alliance and contest elections as the SACP?
I know we are advised by some from the left and the right that the
time has come to break the relationship between the ANC, SACP and
COSATU. This view is erroneous and its ultimate aim will be to
defeat the revolution itself. The time is now to defend the
Alliance on the basis of a progressive platform for change. We
cannot hand over the ANC to capital and reactionaries on a silver
platter. Those who want a black bourgeois party must leave and form
their own party. The ANC will become a bourgeois party over our
dead bodies - it must remain firmly entrenched within the radical
traditions of radical liberation politics of Amilcar Cabral, Oliver
Tambo, Walter Sisulu, Lilian Ngoyi and other stalwarts of our
revolutions.
The working class have invested too much energy, effort and hopes
in the ANC to walk away.
Yet our response to this can't just be a narrow traditional,
old-record sounding slogan "build the alliance and swell the ranks
of the ANC". So far that strategy has not produced much. This
congress must go beyond just repeating this. In my view a
combination of this "swell the ranks" with the real struggle and
unity of the broadest working class is what we now require to
deepen contradictions and guarantee a shift to the left. I am not
suggesting that we have not done this already. But I am arguing
that the scale has been far less satisfactory.
There are encouraging signs that we are in a different space
compared to the hard-core GEAR years, 1996-2000. The political
climate is certainly different from the acrimonious recriminations
of that period. 'Denialism' is slowly giving way to a serious
acknowledgement and appreciation of the social crisis of poverty,
unemployment, inequality and HIV and AIDS.
In ASGISA, government finally acknowledges that the fruits of
growth are not equitably shared and that more ought to be done to
change the apartheid colonial economy.
I am citing all of these to show that we are in a different
political climate than the early and late 1990s. All these changes
are a product of struggle and we must intensify grass-roots
activism on all fronts. The changes I have cited do not mean that
the class project has been defeated. The tentative shifts in the
government stance have not yet gelled into a development strategy
to transfer both wealth and power to the poor and the working
class.
Moreover, the strategy as it stands is riddled with contradictions
as the state seeks to appease both the wealthy and the poor. This
is more reason why we must remain vigilant and intensify the
struggle on all fronts.
We have laid the basis to further tilt the balance in favour of a
more radical change. But what we have done so far is far smaller in
scale than what is required. We need to build our organisations
into powerful instruments of the people's power. We need to build
the broadest possible unity of the working class. We need to
coordinate more our demands into a single class struggle that will
evolve into a single demand for socialism. Yes we need like never
before to place the demand for socialism firmly on the
agenda.
Comrades, a year ago when I was addressing your inaugural congress
I made the observation that the YCL is a breath of fresh air in
youth politics. The remark was based on my observation that the
youth movement was too weak and fragmented. Politically, the ANC
Youth League had shifted rightwards and offered no progressive
programme to mobilise young people to confront the challenges of
under-development, poverty and mass unemployment.
In fact the Youth League was facing the danger of being reduced
into storm-troopers whose main vocation was to silence the
dissenters. It was facing the danger of becoming a stepping stone
to government and business careers, shorn of character and content.
The re-emergence of the YCL therefore heralded a new revival in
youth politics that has been absent for brief period in the post
apartheid South Africa. In this Congress we must ask ourselves
whether we have lived up to the challenge of providing young people
a real political home.
The role played by the YCL in its brief history should be saluted
for re-channelling young people's energies into politics. We are
facing a daunting challenge of de-politicisation of young people by
a cultural stereotype that depicts people as just fun-loving. Young
people have been caricatured into such shallow egocentric and
fun-loving beings that lack character. Yet we know that young
people have played a pivotal role in critical moments of our
history. All they need is political direction and a political home
to channel their energy.
In that respect the YCL has helped shift youth politics to the
left. The tone of the ANCYL has changed from one targeting COSATU
to one raising critical issues facing the youth. We can attribute
this to the emergence and role of the YCL.
It is important to re-emphasise that we need both the YCL and ANCYL
to play a pivotal part in the unfolding national democratic
revolution. The role of the progressive youth movement, SASCO and
COSAS included, is to mould young people in the Congress traditions
and, to that end, deepen the political consciousness of the
youth.
The progressive youth movement must also be at the forefront of
developing new ideas and challenging the older generation. It will
be a sad day when old people are more radical than the youth.
Conceptualised in these terms, the role of the youth movement is
that of torchbearers who catalyse the movement to move forward. On
your shoulders rests a heavy responsibility to revitalise our
movement and build future generations of leaders. You must
therefore take your task seriously and inculcate among your members
a culture of reading and debate so that you can be at the forefront
of producing new knowledge.
The struggle is not going to be won by revolutionary sounding
rhetoric - we need seriously considered alternatives and new
knowledge if we are to challenge the hegemony of capitalist ideas.
COSATU is keenly aware of the challenges that facing the
progressive youth movement and is willing to be an active partner
to help strengthen your organisation.
The YCL must redouble its effort to organise young people and
address their political, social, cultural and economic needs. It
must build a strong vibrant youth movement and teach them working
class ideas.
Comrades, I would like to shift focus and talk about the challenges
confronting the ANC-led democratic movement. This year will go down
as one in which the unity and resolve of the movement was put to
the test. COSATU's Congress was marred by negative publicity and
speculation about its leaders. The YCL has itself faced similar
negative publicity. In short comrades, all the democratic
formations have faced some form of negative publicity. The media
has characterised this phenomenon as the struggle to the end
between the Mbeki and Zuma camps. Any discord or genuine
disagreements about the direction of the movement is analysed
through this narrow lens of how it fits into this battle between
the two camps.
I will be shirking my responsibility as one of the leaders of the
alliance if I fail to put this issue in its proper perspective and
hopefully it will help clarify our members and the broader
public.
Admittedly, there are genuine discussions and disagreements about
how we take forward the NDR in the context of an ANC that is in
political office. This debate is about the relationship between the
social power that lies in the mass democratic movement led by the
ANC and the state in which the ANC play a dominant role. It also
centres around what programme will best advance the goals of the
NDR given the terrain in which we are executing the struggle.
The movement is however united about the goals of the revolution -
to build a non-racial, non-sexist and democratic society.
Substantive disagreements rest on both the programme to achieve
these aims, the role of the alliance and its relationship to state
power. What is the role of the people's movement in the current
period and how do we ensure vibrant internal life in all our
organisations is a pertinent question facing our movement.
So comrades the debate is about the future of the revolution and
the character of the movement implementing that revolution. It is
not a debate about this or that would-be messiah but the programme
and the collective will required to pursue the NDR to its logical
conclusion.
Having said this it is also important to clarify why we support the
ANC Deputy President. I would like to emphatically state that the
support to the Deputy President by all alliance formations, the ANC
included, is based on our belief that he has not been treated
fairly by some organs of the state. His dignity and constitutional
rights have been trampled upon as if he has been found
guilty.
The shabby treatment of comrade JZ has led a significant section of
our comrades to believe that he will not receive a fair trial,
given the prejudicial manner in which his case has been handled. It
is for this reason that COSATU has called for the withdrawal of the
case and the reinstatement of comrade JZ.
I understand that the YCL has also taken a strong stance in support
of the deputy president. We must do more to work for change in our
movement and as I said earlier the debate ought to shift from
personalities to the programmes to take forward the revolution. We
must not allow current debates to degenerate into clashes of
personality.
I have no doubt you will be equal to the task and the country and
COSATU is waiting with bated breath for the outcome of this
congress. I will appeal that you place unity to the League above
petty leadership squabbles. This Congress must be remembered for
taking forward the League rather than digging its grave. Comrades
let us not be tempted to elevate contests for leadership positions
to be the defining moment of this congress. Remember tomorrow you
must all work together to build a strong and vibrant movement -
don't be diverted from the challenge of building unity by narrow
desire to deal with your perceived opponents.