South Africans go to the polls on 8 May, 2019.
EPA/Nic Bothma
The current crisis in British politics is significant for countries like South Africa where a change in electoral systems is needed.
A man challenges police during a protest in Eldorado Park, Johannesburg.
EPA-EFE/Kim Ludbrook
To claim that protests are being organised suggests sinister motives. But all protest is organised. So are cake sales and shopping expeditions.
South Africa urgently needs to get its economy moving again.
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Half of South Africa’s population remain chronically poor, and the quarter in-between struggle to stay out of reach of destitution.
Cyril Ramaphosa, president of South Africa and of the ruling African National Congress.
EPA/Nick Bothma
South African voters are more likely to vote for the African National Congress led by Cyril Ramaphosa than they were when Jacob Zuma led the party.
Mmusi Maimane, leader of South Africa’s main opposition party, the Democratic Alliance, on the campaign trail.
EFE-EPA /Kim Ludbrook
There is a huge divide between what is important right now and what the election is likely to be about.
Villagers till their fields in South Africa’s North West Province. Access to land for small holder farmers remains unresolved.
Epa/Jon Hrusa
Land reform programme has done very little to improve access to land for black South Africans.
South Africans queue to cast their vote in a recent election. The country holds five-yearly national elections on 8 May.
EFE-EPA/Kim Ludbrook
South Africa’s polls have been praised for adhering to international election best practice. But, they are not without problems.
Editor Max du Preez with one of the early editions of Vrye Weekblad.
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A progressive Afrikaans newspaper will be relaunched soon. But Vrye Weekblad can’t trade on its history alone. It will need to consider the challenges of the present and the future.
A man makes his mark in South Africa’s general elections on May 7, 2014.
EPA/Ihsaan Haffejee
Concern at the role of fake sites in influencing South African public opinion has been growing over time.
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa with UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres at the UN headquarters, New York.
EPA-EFE/Angela Weiss
President Cyril Ramaphosa has committed South Africa to prioritising human rights and democracy. But, there’s little evidence of this.
South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa putting final touches to his state of the nation address in which he took a hard stance on corruption.
GCIS
Corruption has, over the past decade and a half, become one of South Africans’ biggest concerns.
The commission chaired by Justice Raymond Zondo has heard shocking testimony on the extent of corruption in government.
EFE-EPA/Kim Ludbrook
Corruption in South Africa became increasingly organised under former President Jacob Zuma.
A new law will promote transparency in the funding of political parties in South Africa.
EFE-EPA/Nic Bothma
Countries that regulate political party funding do so to preserve their sovereignty and integrity of domestic politics.
Keorapetse Kgositsile.
Oupa Nkosi/Mail & Guardian
A consideration of Cuban poet Nancy Morejón’s engagement with Keorapetse Kgositsile and her visits to South Africa – shed new light on her poetic practice.
A victory at the polls might not be enough to give President Cyril Ramaphosa the leeway to fix South Africa’s economy.
EPA-EFE/Nic Bothma
Indications are that even an ANC victory at the polls is unlikely to reverse the party’s decline in popular support.
South African liberation struggle icon Winnie Madikizela-Mandela.
EPA-EFE/Jon Hrusha
Controversy around Winnie Madikizela-Mandela continues in death as it did in life.
President Cyril Ramaphosa’s party, the ANC, faces a tough set of elections in May.
EPA-EFE/Kim Ludbrook
The African National Congress faces two big challenges: fewer South Africans trust it, while its electoral support has been waning.
The Brexit fallout shows why referenda shouldn’t be considered lightly.
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Referenda have their place in democracy, but can also be misused.
South Africa’s next elections will indicate how the ANC is viewed given that the poor been left behind.
EPA/Kim Ludbrook
The ANC, alienated from intellectuals and the middle class and having lost most of its talented youth leadership, is clearly on a downward path.
South African’s President Cyril Ramaphosa. One of the biggest obstacles to his success is the party he leads, the ANC.
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For a long time South Africa thought it had a Jacob Zuma problem. In fact its got a systemic ANC problem.