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Ramaphosa Declares GNU “Here to Stay” After Cohesion Summit
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Published
7 hours agoon
For the past 16 months, South Africa’s political landscape has been an unprecedented experiment: a Government of National Unity (GNU) that forced longtime rivals and ideologically opposed parties to share a table and govern together. Many predicted it would be a short-lived marriage of convenience, destined for a messy and public divorce.
This weekend, President Cyril Ramaphosa sent a clear message to those skeptics: the GNU is not just surviving; it’s digging in for the long haul.
Following a intensive two-day retreat in Gauteng that brought together the ten diverse parties of the coalition, Ramaphosa emerged with a confident declaration. “Many people thought that we would have collapsed by now,” the President acknowledged, speaking on the sidelines of the meeting. “We have reconfirmed that the GNU is here to stay.”
The retreat, which included heavyweights like the ANC and DA alongside smaller parties like the IFP, FF+, and the PA, was less a crisis meeting and more a collective reaffirmation. Its primary goal was to reflect on the partnership’s journey and solidify its future direction.
Ramaphosa was candid about the challenges of the past 16 months, a period that has undoubtedly seen internal friction and public disagreements. However, he framed these not as fatal flaws, but as growing pains. The outcome of the summit, he suggested, was a renewed commitment to “strengthening our partnership” and finding “more and more ways of working together.”
This signals a strategic shift from simply managing a coalition to actively nurturing a cohesive governing body.
Beyond the political rhetoric, the GNU partners focused on tangible outcomes. The most significant announcement was the adoption of a Medium Term Development Plan (MTDP), which will serve as the administration’s transformative blueprint for its full five-year term.
The government’s focus, as outlined, will remain sharply on the issues that matter most to South Africans: driving economic growth, creating jobs, alleviating poverty, and lowering the relentless cost of living. A key pillar will also be strengthening the state’s own capacity to deliver on these promises.
The Presidency’s statement highlighted several milestones already achieved, pointing to progress in critical sectors like energy, logistics, and infrastructure as evidence that the GNU model can, in fact, produce results.
The message from the summit is unambiguous. The initial phase of uneasy alliance is over. The parties involved are now projecting a unified front, claiming to be “more cohesive, determined, and focused than ever before.” For a nation weary of political instability, the promise of a stable, focused government, however unconventional, will be a welcome one. The real test, as always, will be turning this renewed political unity into measurable change on the ground.
{Source: TheSouthAfrican}
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