My dear friends and fellow South Africans,
Today US President-Elect Barack Obama will enter the
South Portico of the White House to meet President
George W Bush. I know that for millions of South
Africans, as well as for the American people, Mr
Obama's victory is replete with history and packed
with symbolism. Its significance is as great as
President Nelson Mandela's election as South
Africa's first democratically- elected President in
April 1994. Just by winning, Mr Obama is assured of
greatness.
And like Madiba, Mr Obama - by dint of breaking the
glass ceiling of colour - is destined to become a
great global figure transcending borders and
ideologies: indeed, a truly global President in the
'new frontier' of the twenty-first century. This
election, with the highest turnout ever, was like no
other before. It was won with legions of
Blackberries, the mobilisation of the youth vote,
and millions of small donations bequeathed online.
Mr Obama, as is well documented, ran not as the
first black presidential candidate, but as the first
post-racial candidate for the White House.
His victory has materialised Martin Luther King's
song of liberty and non-racialism and he displays a
tautness of mind and spirit.
According to one news report, a healthy trade has
already begun in T-shirts placing the election
victory last week in the context of a long battle
for civil rights. One states: "Rosa Parks sat in
1955. Martin Luther King walked in 1963. Barack
Obama ran in 2008. That our children might fly."
And yet it is here - as a man who can fondly recall
meeting two of the young Kennedy brothers in South
Africa in the high noon of apartheid - I would like
to give a word of caution. I fear that expectations
of Mr Obama are so high and so undefined,
disenchantment could quickly follow, if sober minds
and commonsense do not prevail.
The exultant mood may be that of Kennedy's fabled
Camelot, but there is no doubt in my mind that the
task before Mr Obama is as enormous as the one
facing Franklin D Roosevelt in 1932 - the last time
the world teetered on the brink of financial
meltdown and America, like today, has appeared to
have lost its way.
The panoply of public policy decisions before Mr
Obama is simply bewildering: reassessing global
security and terrorism, alternative energy,
redefining America's relationship with the world
(especially the 'developing world', universal
healthcare, racial and ethnic tolerance and
diversity, and restoring faith in the market economy
(the latter poses a far greater challenge than is
presently realised by commentators).
In this post-ideological age, Mr Obama will need to
marshal his pragmatist instincts to, as Franklin D
Roosevelt did, try a policy and, if it should fail,
try again until he find something that works. The
challenges of the hour demand such pragmatism
anchored in principle.
And let us be frank: the store cupboard of ideas -
be it 'left' or 'right' - is looking threadbare at
the moment. There seems to be no pattern or trend
as governments of the left and right rise and fall
across the democratic world: New Zealand has turned
right in the same week as America has chosen Mr
Obama, the centre right reigns in France and Germany
and the reinvigorated left is challenging to hang on
to power in Britain.
In this term, at least, the President-Elect will not
be able to transform America radically, but he will
be able to set the great 'Ship of State' on a
different path. Mr Obama's partisan transcending
appeal, I believe, also extends to our shores. As
the ANC breakaway party so effectively demonstrated
in Johannesburg last weekend, people are sick and
tired of politicians of the standard variety and
yearn for someone - or something new - truly new and
different. The South African Congress of the People
has benefited, I believe, as much from this desire
for change as the seismic upheavals in the
ruling party.
As we take stock of the IEC's first voter
registration weekend, more seismic shifts are
apparent. KwaZulu Natal alone has added 300,000 new
people to its common voters' roll, almost 45,000 of
whom hail from the Zululand District where our own
IFP National Chairperson and Mayor, Cllr Zanele
kaMagwaza-Msibi, has not only been running an
intensive registration drive but also a municipality
with balanced books - in a province whose finances
are, under ANC leadership, perilously in the red.
But returning to Mr Obama, I would like to make an
observation too about his predecessor's record as
President Bush leaves the office. Although history
will largely recall his controversial policy towards
Iraq and Afghanistan, there are at least two areas
where he led by example.
Mr Bush was the first US President to appoint not
one but two African American Secretaries of State -
Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice. These
appointments no doubt made Mr Obama's ascendancy
much more possible. And then there was Mr Bush's
impressive record on Africa.
The OECD statistics indicate that under the Bush
administration, US humanitarian and development aid
to Africa has increased from $1.4 billion annually
in 2001 to $4 billion.
In addition, Bush demonstrated a commitment to
combating HIV/Aids and malaria in Africa. Egypt,
Ethiopia, Sudan and Uganda are among the world's top
10 recipients of aid from the US, and US trade with
Africa has doubled since 2001. He also increased
humanitarian and development aid to the continent to
almost $9 billion by 2010.
These achievements mark a clear difference between
rhetoric and deeds and they are certainly worth
emulating.
Yours sincerely,
Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi MP
Contact: Jon Cayzer,
084 5557144