Can South Africans pin their hopes for a new Madiba on his grandson Mandla Mandela?
Zille up against Boesak
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Sun, 01 Mar 2009 16:24
Democratic Alliance leader and Cape Town mayor Helen Zille announced
on Sunday that she will be her party's candidate for premier of the
Western Cape in the upcoming elections.
"After considerable discussion with the party leadership I have
agreed to be nominated as the Democratic Alliance's premier candidate
for the Western Cape," she told a press briefing in Cape Town.
Zille said the DA wanted to wrest control of the province from the
African National Congress on April 22 and turn it into the next
showcase of DA governance.
She said if it could run both Cape Town and the Western Cape, voters
across South Africa would realise that service delivery is better in
regions where the DA is in power.
If was therefore strategically more important that she win control
of the province than lead the opposition in Parliament, she added
"It is a project of national significance. We want to run the city
and the province in co-operative governance
and demonstrate what it
possible under those circumstances," she said, adding that as mayor she
was frustrated by stone-walling on the part of the ANC powers in the
province.
Zille said she was confident that the DA would emerge as the biggest
party in the Western Cape, but conceded that it might have to enter
into a coalition with other parties.
"In the current situation where we are now we are looking set to win
the province, but seven weeks is a long time and anything can happen.
"Wherever we don't win outright we will certainly look at
coalitions."
While the African National Congress is yet to announce its candidate
for premier in the hotly contested province, Allan Boesak confirmed on
Friday that he will run for the Congress of the People after earlier
turning down the nomination.
Zille said she was unfazed by the cleric, who served jail time for
fraud and theft but was later pardoned by former president Thabo Mbeki,
and
believed his dithering had damaged the fledgling party.
"I feel quite sorry for Allan Boesak and for Cope in the Western
Cape because they've had such a bad start. I'm quite relaxed."
She said the DA has been a given a boost by battles within the ANC.
"We are being enormously helped by the internal unravelling of the
ANC and this is happening faster than people think."
Zille said smaller parties should realise that their aim is to take
support away from the ANC, and not simply redistribute opposition votes
between themselves.
"Our role is not to juggle votes between the opposition because that
is like re-arranging the deck chairs on the Titanic."