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South Africa’s ANC says it needs to reform to regain support

By Thomson Reuters Dec 12, 2025 | 1:42 AM

By Nellie Peyton

JOHANNESBURG, Dec 12 (Reuters) – South Africa’s African National Congress, the liberation movement that brought Nelson Mandela to power, said it was facing a crisis over ‍corruption, poor governance, and persistent racial inequality, and pledged to clean up its act.

Although the largest party in government, the ANC was forced into a coalition last year after losing its parliamentary majority for the first time since 1994. That defeat has prompted soul-searching.

Wrapping up ‌a strategy conference in Johannesburg on Thursday, ‌the party endorsed a declaration that identified corruption, factionalism, poor service delivery, and slow progress in reducing poverty among its failures.

“The apartheid-colonial political economy remains largely intact,” it admitted, with Black South Africans vastly ​disadvantaged compared with the small white minority.

“We understand our struggle to be at a fork in the road, and thus, ‍we can either renew or perish,” ​the party said, vowing to set itself performance ​targets across a range of issues.

The ANC faces municipal elections ‍in 2026 that it sees as a key test of its standing. While still revered by many for ending white minority rule, the party has lost support among younger voters fed up with a lack of progress and a culture of ‍cronyism.

The second-biggest party, the Democratic Alliance, favours free-market economics and wants to scrap the ANC’s racial redress policies, which have also been ‍criticised by U.S. ‍President Donald Trump.

“This will be an important test ​of the extent to which we have ​managed to ⁠renew the support and confidence of our ‌people,” President Cyril Ramaphosa, the ANC’s leader, told the conference.

He said the party was making progress in rebuilding a culture of integrity, citing greater compliance with its “step aside” rule that requires members accused of wrongdoing to relinquish their posts.

(Reporting by Nellie Peyton;Editing by Alexander Winning ⁠and Clarence Fernandez)