Tag: SACP

AN OPEN LETTER TO THE SOUTH AFRICAN COMMUNIST PARTY

Dear Comrades of the South African Communist Party, We write to you as ZASO following lengthy deliberations with like-minded allies whosubscribe to independent socialist politics and support the primary thrust of what follows below. Firstly, we share your conviction that the fragmentation of the left and movements of the working class and poor must be overcome, and that South Africa’s deepening social crisis — mass unemployment, poverty, inequality, […]

TOWARDS A CONFERENCE OF THE LEFT: THOSE MAKING THE CALL NEED TO ANSWER CRITICAL QUESTIONS

South Africa is living through a deepening social crisis. Unemployment, inequality, hunger, state decay, ecological destruction, and violence continue to define everyday life for millions. The political formations that once claimed to represent the aspirations of the working class have lost legitimacy, while the Right – both neoliberal and authoritarian – has grown stronger. In […]

Mazibuko Jara | Why the SACP needs to focus beyond the Alliance

Dinga Sikwebu’s article in last week’s City Press (“SACP’s umms and ahhs: Holes in motivations to contest elections”, Sun 18 Jan 2026, https://www.news24.com/citypress/voices/dingwa-sikwebu-sacps-umms-and-ahhs-holes-in-motivations-to-contest-elections-20260117-1174) lands a necessary challenge: the SACP’s decision to contest the 2026 local government elections is politically significant, but it currently reads as a half-step — an “umming and ahhing” posture that may […]

The SACP and Neoliberalism

Dennis Davis and Karl Klare argue that transformative constitutionalism has not been fully pursued by the African National Congress (ANC). As the governing party between 1994 and 2024, it was in poll position to use the powers of state to give effect to and operationalise the imaginary that the 1996 Constitution presents. This imaginary, they argue, provided for a thorough transformation of the state that would have overturned the legacies of colonialism and apartheid and paved the way for the actualisation of the full human potential of particularly black people, women, poor people, and sexual minorities. Rather than it being, as anti-constitutionalist detractors would have it, a failure of the Constitution to address the urgent colonial and apartheid legacies impacting these groups, Davis and Klare contend that it is a failure of politics that has left specifically economic relations unchanged. I concur with this argument, based on my own previous analysis (Van der Westhuizen et al. 2023; Van der Westhuizen 2007). This failure of politics becomes apparent with the necessary historicisation —that is, when the actual conditions and relevant political and ideological factors and actions informing the transition to democracy are studied. Such historicisation makes a nonsense of claims that South Africa’s constitutional democracy amounts to mere neo-apartheid (see for example Mpofu-Walsh 2021). I would add to the diagnosis of a failure of politics the failure of political imagination, due in part to what can be described as post-socialist attachments. The concept of ‘post-socialism’ is derived from analyses of the crisis-ridden incorporation of the former Soviet Bloc into the capitalist world order, and is used here with reference to the legacies of ANC exposure to Soviet political practices during the exile period (Engel and Saunders 2023; Kalb 2019). While exiled members of the ANC and its ally the South African Community Party (SACP) generally possessed little knowledge about Soviet economic planning and institutions (Freund 2013, p. 520), they did return to South Africa with political ideas influenced more by party-driven centralisation of political control than by democracy — therefore influenced by an imaginary of so-called ‘revolutionary discipline’ that Stephen Ellis (2012, p. 298) describes as involving ‘contempt for real politics’.

Can the SACP Help Rebuild a Democratic, Militant Left?

The South African Communist Party’s (SACP) decision to stand independently of the African National Congress (ANC) in the coming local government elections deserves to be welcomed. For decades, independent socialists and other militants have argued that the Party’s subordination within the Tripartite Alliance weakened the political independence of the working class and tied the fate of socialist politics to the fortunes of the ANC. The fact that the SACP has now resolved to stand on its own—even if belatedly—represents a potential step forward in re-conquering the independence of the working class and advancing class politics based on socialist renewal.

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