Relief for Ramaphosa but the wolves remain resolutely on NEC doorstep
The ANC's new top seven leadership from left: second deputy secretary-general Maropene Ramokgopa, first deputy secretary-general Nomvula Mokonyane, secretary-general Fikile Mbalula, chairperson Gwede Mantashe, President Cyril Ramaphosa, deputy president Paul Mashatile and treasurer-general Gwen Ramokgopa.19 December 2022. (Photo: Leila Dougan)Byย Marianne Merten19 Dec 2022Follow0
ANC president Cyril Ramaphosa can exhale, perhaps for the first time in days, now that Mondayโs ANC election results delivered his people in five of the seven top officials posts of the governing party.
The two exceptions from outside President Cyril Ramaphosaโs slate are the deputy presidentโs post that went to Paul Mashatile, and the first deputy secretary-generalโs post clinched by Nomvula Mokonyane.
But the votes show a tight margin. While a win is a win, the narrow counts indicate the last-minute horse trading and cajoling that went on behind the scenes. It may not have left the wounded of the 2007 Polokwane ANC conference where Jacob Zuma was elected, and the seeds of Cope planted, but it has potentially exposed pressure points to be exploited at a later stage in the heave-toe of ANC political jockeying.
The exact nature of deals done must and will emerge in the coming months, through leaks and what the ANC usually describes as โredeploymentsโ.


But how close it was, right to the end, emerged clearly in the 44 vote difference for the national chairperson post: 2,062 for Gwede Mantashe, Ramaphosaโs trusted party ally and battle axe, against the 2,018 for Stanley Mathabatha, whom many in Limpopo would like to see the back of before his final term as premier ends in 2024.ย
Only 50 votes clinched Mokonyane the post over last-minute from the floor nominee, parliamentary police committee chairperson Tina Joemat-Pettersson by her home province of the Northern Cape, firmly in the Ramaphosa side.
Itโs a 102-vote margin that put Fikile Mbalula in as secretary-general, triggering his resignation as transport minister, over Phumulo Masualle, deputy public enterprises minister.ย
In the treasurer-generalโs vote, the so-called other side associated with Zweli Mkhize as ANC president, could have had it โ if Pule Mabe, the ANC national spokesperson, and ex-Ekurhuleni mayor Mzwandile Masina actually had combined their bid before the vote, their respected 1,652 and 281, it could have beaten the, ultimately successful, pro-Ramaphosa nomination from the floor of Gwen Ramokgopa. Her 1,809 votes beat Mabeโs 1,652 by 157 crosses on the ballot paper.


A comfortable margin was only scored by second deputy secretary-general Maropene Ramokgopa, 425 votes more than her rival municipal councillor and womenโs league rep Ronalda Nalumango, but at a cost โ resignation as Ramaphosaโs international relations special advisor.
In the two days to the election of the top seven officials โ an ANC constitutional amendment to introduce a second deputy secretary-general was approved at plenary โ word was that Mkhizeโs side had lobbied hard to make headways.
Meetings with Mpumalanga and Limpopo on Friday evening and at the weekend boosted confidence. The Ramaphosa lobby was reportedly worried but breathed a sigh of relief when word came thatย Limpopo stayed true, and Mpumalanga had also not switched.


โHeโs worked hardโ came the recognition for Mkhize also from those firmly in the Ramaphosa grouping. Ultimately it showed in the voting numbers: 1,897 for Mkhize, or just double the initial branch nominations, against Ramaphosaโs 2,476.
And that was enough to win a second term as ANC president, set to lead the party into the 2024 elections.
But itโs hardly a shift up from the 2,037 branch nominations that signalled a Ramaphosa win when they were first released. And the final tally is also just 283 votes over the winning threshold of 2,193.
All of this must raise caution even as the champagne corks are popped to celebrate what was a nail-biter right to the end. Itโs a case of first hurdle done, now for the mountain.
โTime for dreaming is over. Results are announced now,โ were Mantasheโs final words before the voting outcome detailed by ex-president Kgalema Motlanthe, head of the ANC electoral committee who told the old National Executive Committee (NEC) to vacate their conference seats on the platform.
He got as far as saying โOne thousandโฆโ against Mkhizeโs name before delegates jumped from seats to gather before the stage singing for Ramaphosa.
It was the moment tensions broke.ย ย
Grievances were raised from the floor over Mantasheโs win, and again on the secretary-general announcement after both were announced for the Ramaphosa slate. However, once the numbers were read out again, they seemed to be accepted.
Ramaphosa has avoided the potential horror of having won the Luthuli House presidency, heโd have officials from the other slate. But that may change yet: heโs said to have left it beyond the last minute to indicate his preferences for the National Executive Committee (NEC), the ANCโs highest decision-making body between conferences.
But at Monday lunchtime, Ramaphosa and his supporters could take a breather โ first test passed, but a mountain (or two) ahead.ย DM
Daily Maverick