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COSATU Urges Calm As ANC And SACP Rift Deepens Ahead Of Local Elections

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Source: Power 987 News on X {https://x.com/POWER987News/status/2048917353979605202/photo/1}

South Africa’s long-standing political alliance is showing visible cracks, and labour federation COSATU is stepping in, hoping to steady the ship before things spiral further.

At the centre of the latest friction is the decision by the South African Communist Party to contest upcoming local government elections independently. It is a move that has unsettled the African National Congress and sparked a fresh round of tensions within the alliance.

COSATU Calls For Cooler Heads

The Congress of South African Trade Unions has now publicly urged both sides to dial down the rhetoric and return to constructive engagement.

Speaking on behalf of the federation, parliamentary coordinator Matthew Parks stressed the need for urgent dialogue, warning that the current public disagreements are doing more harm than good.

He pointed out that ordinary South Africans, particularly those already struggling with rising living costs, job losses, failing municipal services and crime, are not reassured by political infighting at the top.

For COSATU, the stakes are not just political. The federation shares members and a support base with both the ANC and the SACP. That overlap makes the fallout more than just a leadership dispute. It cuts into the very fabric of the working-class constituency the alliance was built to serve.

The Trigger: SACP’s Election Move

Tensions escalated after the South African Communist Party confirmed it would go it alone at the polls.

The move marks a significant shift in alliance politics. For decades, the SACP has worked alongside the African National Congress and COSATU under the tripartite alliance banner, often backing ANC candidates rather than contesting elections independently.

The ANC, however, did not take the decision lightly. Last week, it issued a firm ultimatum to SACP members, effectively asking them to choose which organisation they would campaign for in the upcoming elections.

That demand has only deepened the divide, raising questions about whether the alliance can maintain unity in its current form.

Why COSATU Is Concerned

COSATU’s intervention reflects deeper anxieties about fragmentation within the alliance. The federation fears that continued public clashes could split not only leadership structures but also its broader membership base.

The concern is rooted in history. The alliance has long positioned itself as a unified front representing workers and the poor. Any visible breakdown risks weakening that identity at a time when many South Africans are already disillusioned with political leadership.

From a local perspective, the timing could not be worse. Municipal elections are often where service delivery frustrations come to the surface most sharply. Communities across the country continue to grapple with unreliable water supply, electricity challenges and deteriorating infrastructure. Political unity, or at least coordination, tends to matter more in these spaces.

Push For An Urgent Political Council

To prevent further escalation, COSATU is calling for an urgent political council meeting. The goal is simple: get leaders from all sides into one room and find common ground before the situation worsens.

For now, the federation’s message is clear. Internal disputes should be handled behind closed doors, not played out in public where they risk alienating the very people the alliance claims to represent.

Whether that call will be enough to cool tensions remains to be seen. But as election season approaches, the pressure is mounting for all sides to decide whether unity is still possible or whether a new political reality is beginning to take shape.

{Source:EWN}

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