Excluded? Buy your way in
     Brendan Boyle | 26 January, 2012 00:40
     
     The ANC has been selling access to government leaders           at least since 2006.
     
     It is not a uniquely South African practice, but it is one that     needs to be monitored as we head towards Mangaung 2012, where the     party's next leadership battle will be fought. In South Africa, the     process is managed by the party through an organisation it owns, the     Progressive Business Forum (PBF). You will find it advertised on the     ANC website.
     
     This is separate from the ANC's secretive funding arm, Chancellor     House, which does business with the government on the party's     behalf. The issues are different, though I am sure that the business     deals that emerge from each often overlap.
     
     For a considerable sum - which is not publicly advertised - you can     buy PBF membership in various categories and get invited to     functions with ANC leaders, who happen also to run the government     departments that formulate policy and whose tenders are the fountain     of new wealth in this country.
     
     "As a participant you will be part of an informal mechanism for     frank and open discussion between the business community and ANC     government leaders," the PBF advertises. This sort of interaction     between business and government leaders is as old as politics.
     
     It happened at the Roman forum and it is not of itself cause for     particular alarm.
     
     But, in this country, selling this sort of access has become a     significant source of party funding.
     
     It is not the government that is being paid for access to, for     example, Minister of Trade and Industry Rob Davies, it is the party.
     
     In Britain, the process appears to have been privatised and the     kickback to the parties in power is unclear. The Guardian newspaper     led its front page on Wednesday with news that a corporate lobbyist,     the Chemistry Club, was charging companies up to £1800 (about     R22330) to meet ministers at carefully managed networking events.
     
     We go further even than this in South Africa, however.
     
     "You will also ... be given the opportunity to join ANC-led     international trade missions and conferences, enabling you to     promote your products and services internationally," the     organisation promises on its website.
     
     Those trips are not actually ANC-led, they are government-led - and     funded. Many countries, China and Angola from my own experience,     tend to see the business delegation travelling with a president as     somehow sanctioned or government approved.
     
     It is almost as good as a government credit guarantee.
     
     Getting this sort of access should not be in the gift of a party.
     
     The delegations that travel with presidents should be chosen on the     basis of their economic significance, not their loyalty to the party     in power.
     
     Their separation from politics should be emphasised, not blurred.
     
     The independent South African democracy watchdog, the Institute for     Democracy in SA (Idasa) has been lobbying for nearly 15 years for     legislation to enforce transparency in political party funding. The     problem it confronts is that, though everyone acknowledges the need     to some degree, each wants the other to go first.
     
     "The ANC should champion the introduction of a comprehensive system     of public funding of representative political parties in the     different spheres of government and civil society organisations as     part of strengthening the tenets of our new democracy," the party     resolved at its stormy Polokwane conference in 2007.
     
     "The incoming [national executive committee of the ANC] must     urgently develop guidelines and policy on public and private     funding, including how to regulate investment vehicles."
     
     ANC treasurer-general Mathews Phosa has talked about it often,     saying he favours a German model, but no legislation has been tabled     or publicly discussed.
     
     That line "how to regulate investment vehicles", which appears to     refer directly to Chancellor House, could be the major stumbling     block.
     
     Idasa's Judith February, who heads the organisation's political     information and monitoring group, says enough research has been done     on the topic and what is needed now is the political will to enforce     transparency.
     
     "If we don't know where parties are getting their money, it means     people can be exercising influence over policy . with citizens not     getting the information to enable them to join the dots," she said.
     
     With the ANC's next internal election just 10 months away, and the     real possibility of another internal change of power, the incentive     to get close to the party players is going to strengthen.
     
     If Jacob Zuma and his cronies are ousted, there will be a new gold     rush, as there was after the Polokwane conference at which Zuma     ousted Thabo Mbeki.
     
     From education to the environment, those in the know would be able     either to push a new administration towards their own fields of     opportunity or anticipate the business that new ministers would     create. Organisations such as the ANC's PBF, and possibly clones of     Britain's Chemistry Club, will be in the pound seats, selling time     with those who can sell access to wealth for the people excluded by     the current elite.
     
     Without regulated transparency about who goes to these events and     what they pay to be there, we will not, as February puts it, be able     to join the dots.
     
     Find the original article HERE
     
   
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