ANC loses parliamentary majority for first time since end of apartheid
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — The African National Congress party loses its parliamentary majority in a historic election result that puts South Africa on a new political path for the first time since the end of the apartheid system of white minority rule 30 years ago.
With more than 99 percent of votes counted, the once-dominant ANC receives just over 40% in Wednesday’s election, well short of the majority it had held since the famed all-race vote of 1994 that ended apartheid and brought it to power under Nelson Mandela. The final results are still to be formally declared by the independent electoral commission that ran the election, but the ANC cannot pass 50%.
At the start of the election, the commission said it would formally declare the results by Sunday, but that could come earlier.
While opposition parties hail the result as a momentous breakthrough for a country struggling with deep poverty and inequality, the ANC remains the biggest party. However, it will now likely need to look for a coalition partner or partners to remain in the government and reelect South African President Cyril Ramaphosa for a second and final term. Parliament elects the South African president after national elections.
“The way to rescue South Africa is to break the ANC’s majority and we have done that,” main opposition leader John Steenhuisen says
The way forward promises to be complicated for Africa’s most advanced economy, and there’s no coalition on the table yet.
Steenhuisen’s Democratic Alliance party is on around 21% of the vote. The new MK Party of former South African president Jacob Zuma, who has turned against the ANC he once led, was third with just over 14% of the vote in the first election it has contested. The Economic Freedom Fighters was in fourth with just over 9%.