Development,
Part 10
The Party Goes Local
The final
part of this course on Development is concerned with the building of the mass
collective Subject of History, starting with the main agent of such
organisation, the communist party, in this case, the South African Communist
Party, the SACP.
The SACP is
in the process of converting its branches to “Voting District” branches. The
SACP is also determined to achieve a 500 000
membership, or roughly one per cent of the South African population.
Urban Voting Districts in South Africa contain some 3,000 voters on
average located within a radius of some 7,5 km of each Voting District’s single
voting station. Rural Voting Districts accommodate some 1,200 voters located
within a radius of some 10 km of the voting station. There are normally
several, often four or five, Voting Districts in each electoral ward.
SACP Party Branches are supposed to have a minimum of 25 members according to its
Constitution, which has not changed. The same rules apply to the new situation.
The next item in this last part of the Development Series
will focus on the ANC’s Imvuselelo
Campaign, and the third and final instalment will focus on SADTU’s recruitment, which in turn is in parallel with recruitment
by other trade unions within and outside of COSATU, our federation, and with other mass organisations.
Localisation of
the Alliance
What are the implications of all this recruitment? What
qualitative changes may arise from the envisaged quantitative increase?
The
National Democratic Revolutionary Alliance has been called “tripartite”, referring
to the SACP - the vanguard party of
the working class, the ANC – the
mass, class-alliance, unity-in-action liberation movement, and COSATU, the federation of mass
industrial trade unions. But in addition to these, the historic “civic”
movement SANCO has a status as the
fourth member of the Alliance. If there was a free-standing Women’s Movement,
it could serve as the fifth independent Alliance partner.
The
qualitative change which can be expected if the SACP succeeds in creating a
substantial number of branches at Voting District level, and if the ANC is able
to consolidate its 100-member-plus-per-ward branch structure, and if the local
structures of the Trade Union movement can become similarly well-defined, is
that the localisation of the Alliance will become a practical possibility.
For many
years past, sundry expressions of disappointment been heard saying that the
Alliance does not function at local level. The main stumbling block to this
local functioning of the Alliance was never a lack of intention but rather the
lack of equivalent basic structures across the three main organisations. The
SACP especially was apt to be patchy in terms of its coverage on the ground,
with hardly any organisational correspondence to the ANC at branch level. SACP
Districts have also hardly talked to ANC Regions or to COSATU locals. Only at
Provincial and National levels have the three structures been equivalent across
all three of the main Alliance organisations.
The coming
increase in membership of the SACP and the ANC will mean that it will be
possible to populate viable parallel structures all the way down to branch
level. This in turn will open up the prospect of a renewed relevance for SANCO,
which can be the locus of combination with other mass organisation, of women,
of religious people, and more.
The
implications for the possibility of conscious, all-round development of the
country in the fullest sense are profound.
The attached
document is a compilation of the Commission Report on Building a Strong SACP
from a Conference of Commissars, and notes on forming Voting District Branches,
including extracts from the SACP Constitution as it was prior to the 13th
Congress. Please refer to the latest version of the constitution before acting.
- The above is to
introduce the original reading-text: Building a strong
SACP, Forming a VD Branch.
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