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South Africa’s governing party, the African National Congress, moved to kick Jacob Zuma out of the party on Monday, punishing the former president for campaigning for a rival political party.
The party announced that it had suspended Mr. Zuma’s membership after he helped to form a rival party, of which he has become the “figure head,” the party’s leadership said. The announcement followed a meeting of its National Executive Committee.
It was not immediately clear whether Mr. Zuma would be allowed to challenge his suspension or face an internal disciplinary process. Describing him as “erratic” and “disruptive,” the party said it wanted to “cut its losses.”
The suspension of the former president of the country and the party is a remarkable reproach by party leaders who spent years defending Mr. Zuma against accusations of corruption and wrongdoing, even as his tenure eroded public support for the party. In the aftermath of his presidency, Mr. Zuma continued to sow political chaos as he evaded accountability and undermined the party’s current leadership through stinging public statements.
The decision to take disciplinary action against Mr. Zuma, who became a symbol of widespread corruption and impunity, signals a break from this corrosive legacy and a show of strength by President Cyril Ramaphosa as he seeks re-election.
“Rebel breakaway groupings,” sought to undermine the African National Congress, said Fikile Mbalula, the party’s secretary general. Though he said the party would renew itself as the party’s leadership now took responsibility for the failures of Mr. Zuma’s time in office.
As the face of a party that has tried to position itself as more radical and populist on issues like land redistribution, Mr. Zuma was also responsible for derailing South Africa’s progress since the end of apartheid, he added.
“As renewal gains momentum Zuma and others, whose conduct is in conflict with its values and principles, will find themselves on the outside the African National Congress,” Mr. Mbalula said in a public briefing.
Still, analysts say it will be difficult to disentangle the party from Mr. Zuma in the minds of many voters. In recent weeks, while he endorsed an opposition party, some members of the A.N.C. leadership tried to persuade Mr. Zuma, 81, to return to the fold, an indication of the sway he still holds.
A former anti-apartheid activist who was jailed for his role in the A.N.C., Mr. Zuma’s political ascension came to represent what critics saw as the disintegration of the party of Nelson Mandela. Still, Mr. Zuma remains a popular figure in South Africa, able to command large crowds who view him as an antidote to elitism within the A.N.C. Mr. Zuma led the country for nearly a decade before he stepped down in 2017.
With a pivotal national election just months away, Mr. Zuma’s removal from the party would also signal the breakdown of the political relationship between Mr. Zuma and the party’s current leadership under President Cyril Ramaphosa.
Last year, Mr. Zuma announced that he would not vote for the A.N.C. in the upcoming election, and instead threw his weight behind a newly formed opposition party.
“My conscience will not allow me to lie to the people of South Africa,” Mr. Zuma said in a statement read by his daughter Duduzile Zuma-Sambudla.
Yet, even has he denounced Mr. Ramaphosa’s government as “sellouts,” he vowed never to leave the A.N.C. and publicly insisted that he remained a member. He said his decision to campaign for another party was to punish the leaders who have “mishandled” the party.
Mr. Zuma chose to make the statement during the official launch of this new opposition party in December. The new political outfit bears the name of the A.N.C.’s apartheid-era armed wing, the uMkhonto we Sizwe, meaning the spear of the nation. The party’s colors, green, white and gold, echo those of the A.N.C. The new party has ignored calls from the 112-year-old liberation movement to change its name. The A.N.C. said it planned to challenge the new party’s name and branding in the electoral court.
Convicted of defying a court order to testify before a national inquiry on corruption in 2021, Mr. Zuma is not legally eligible to run for president. While he is not the official leader of the new party, he is its most recognizable champion. Mr. Zuma has vigorously campaigned for the new party, particularly in his traditional stronghold of the KwaZulu-Natal Province, dismissing questions over his failing health.
In 2021, after serving just two months in jail, Mr. Zuma was released from prison on medical parole, after his doctors asserted that he was terminally ill and could not complete his 15-month prison sentence. At the time, his incarceration prompted a wave of protests that led to some of the deadliest riots in South Africa since the end of apartheid.
A judge overruled his medical parole. But Mr. Zuma only had to return to prison for less than two hours, as he was set free under an early release program that critics say the A.N.C. government implemented to shield its former leader from legal consequences.
Earlier this year, Mr. Mbalula admitted that leaders had lied for Mr. Zuma when an independent watchdog found that he had used state funds to upgrade his compound in KwaZulu-Natal.
Even in suspending him, the party was slow to move against Mr. Zuma, said Mashupye Maserumule, a professor of public affairs at the Tshwane University of Technology in Pretoria.
“Zuma is a creation of the A.N.C.,” Professor Maserumule said. Many of the party’s current leaders were in the “forefront of protecting him,” and did not want to see him kicked out the party, he added.
For some in the party, this is a “good riddance moment,” said a member who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.
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