Metro Plus News Former South African leader Zuma’s political party joins an alliance

Former South African leader Zuma’s political party joins an alliance

South Africa’s
uMkhonto we Sizwe (MK) party will join an alliance of smaller
opposition parties in parliament in a bid to take on the African
National Congress and Democratic Alliance-led coalition
government, it said on Sunday.
The ANC and its largest rival, the white-led, pro-business
Democratic Alliance, agreed on Friday to work together in a
coalition it called “government of national unity”, a step
change after 30 years of ANC rule.
Former president Jacob Zuma’s uMkhonto we Sizwe party came
in a surprisingly strong third in the May 29 election which saw
the ANC lose its majority. MK won 14.6% of the vote which
translated into 58 seats in the 400-seat National Assembly.
However, MK lawmakers boycotted the first sitting of the
National Assembly on Friday after filing a complaint at the
country’s top court alleging vote-rigging, which the court
dismissed as without merit.
Reading a statement on behalf of Zuma, spokesperson Nhlamulo
Ndhlela told reporters that the MK party will join the alliance
called the “Progressive Caucus”, which includes the Marxist
Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) and the centre-left United
Democratic Movement.
This alliance commands close to 30% of the seats in the
National Assembly, Ndhlela said, sitting next to Zuma – who had
a cough but answered questions after the statement – and the
leaders of a number of small parties.
“This united effort is necessary because the 2024 election
has also resulted in the consolidation of right-wing and
reactionary forces who are opposed to economic freedom, radical
economic transformation, racial equality and land repossession,”
he said.
Ndhlela said that MK had decided to take up its seats in the
National Assembly after receiving legal advice and that it would
continue to raise its allegations of a rigged election in
parliament and in courts.
The Independent Electoral Commission has said the election
was free and fair.
Zuma also slammed the unity government – which includes two
smaller parties, the socially conservative Inkatha Freedom Party
and the right-wing Patriotic Alliance – calling it “meaningless”
and a “white-led unholy alliance”.